Bouncer
"Bouncer" in a Sentence (18 examples)
The bouncer wouldn't let him in.
Tom works as a bouncer in a nightclub.
Tom works as a bouncer.
An Englishman, a Scotsman, an Irishman, a Welshman, a Gurkha, a Latvian, a Turk, an Aussie, a German, an American, an Egyptian, a Japanese, a Mexican, a Spaniard, a Russian, a Pole, a Lithuanian, a Jordanian, a Kiwi, a Swede, a Finn, an Israeli, a Romanian, a Bulgarian, a Serb, a Swiss, a Greek, a Singaporean, an Italian, a Norwegian, an Argentinian, a Libyan and a South African went to a night club. The bouncer said: "Sorry, I can't let you in without a Thai."
Can't you get in without lining up because you know the bouncer?
The bouncer was accused of assaulting a drunken patron.
Tom couldn't get past the bouncer.
The bouncer asked to see her I.D.
The bouncer asked to see Tom's I.D.
The bouncer allowed two people in.
At 199 centimetres and a hundred kilos going up, he was scary big and he found work as a bouncer and enforcer[.]
‘You try to hit the bouncer that you should duck under. Your bat misses it completely. The ball strikes your temple, whack!’
"Why, I'll tell you, Mr. Simple; he's a good tempered, kind fellow enough, but—" / "But what?" / "Such a bouncer!!" / "How do you mean? He's not a very stout man." / "Bless you, Mr. Simple, why don't you understand English. I mean that he's the greatest liar that ever walked a deck.[…]"
The stone must be a bouncer.
"… when he wants to accomplish his purpose, he does not hesitate to invent—I am not quite sure of the word, but I think it is “bouncers.”
"Why, I'll tell you, Mr. Simple; he's a good tempered, kind fellow enough, but—" / "But what?" / "Such a bouncer!!" / "How do you mean? He's not a very stout man." / "Bless you, Mr. Simple, why don't you understand English. I mean that he's the greatest liar that ever walked a deck.[…]"
He shook his head and took up the child—Dilly kicked out her feet in tiny electric jolts to the full stretch of the Babygro.[…]He put the child in the bouncer again.
Noting a shop where goods are piled on the counter, or within reach, a man goes in called a bouncer, and generally asks to look at some handkerchiefs, selecting a time when there is only one shopman in the way, breakfast-time for instance; whilst this is going on, a well-dressed youth comes in with a blue bag in his hand, asking for shoe-ties, or some trifling article. Now the work begins; […]
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Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.