Rolex

//ˈɹəʊlɛks//

"Rolex" in a Sentence (15 examples)

This gold Rolex is an expensive watch alien to my lifestyle.

Tom wears a fake Rolex.

Sami bought a Rolex watch.

Tom has a Rolex.

Tom has a fake Rolex.

Sami has a Rolex watch.

Ziri has a Rolex.

Tom was an absurd peasant. He would walk through his plot, feeling the tomatoes to see if they were ripe, with his Nike sneakers, his latest-generation phone and his Rolex.

Rodrigo bought a Rolex watch.

Rodrigo was wearing four Rolex watches on his wrist.

He pulled up his sleeve and there on his scrawny arm hung a Rolex the size of Big Ben.

Rolex is a chapati roll with fried eggs stuffed in, accompanied with fresh vegetable salad.

All this time our rolex has always been a humble meal; a taste best savoured around suburbs by those who, if not out of time to prepare a decent meal, are out of money to do as much. […] To spice up the event, a dish of well-manicured and half-piece (half-piece!) rolexes was ushered in.

A welcome, if humble, addition to Kampala's edible offerings is the 'rolex'. This is nothing more (or less) than a freshly cooked chapati enhanced by a fresh omelette, chopped onions, green peppers and finely sliced cabbage.

An omelette fried and rolled up in a chapati (Indian flatbread), rolex is excellent food on the go, and a firm breakfast favourite on the streets of Kampala, where it's often still served in a roll or cone of newspaper.

Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.