Use of bookish in Sentences. 47 Examples

The examples include bookish at the start of sentence, bookish at the end of sentence and bookish in the middle of sentence

For urdu meanings and examples of bookish click here

bookish at the start of sentence


  1. Bookish bachelor seeking single Noetic Scientist?
  2. Bookish bachelor seeking single Noetic Scientist?

bookish at the end of sentence


  1. The form "book"underlies"bookish.

bookish in the middle of sentence


  1. He writes in a bookish style.
  2. He writes in a bookish style.
  3. She was always a bookish child.
  4. She was always a bookish child.
  5. He was filled with bookish notions.
  6. He was filled with bookish notions.
  7. Bill was the studious, bookish type.
  8. Don't be so bookish and unrealistic.
  9. Don't be so bookish and unrealistic.
  10. Bill was the studious, bookish type.
  11. The bookish, the contemplative life.
  12. Arthur Frommer is a bookish sort of guy.
  13. Arthur Frommer is a bookish sort of guy.
  14. Fanshawe was not a bookish child, however.
  15. Fanshawe was not a bookish child, however.
  16. He was reticent, patrician, bookish, urbane.
  17. He was reticent, patrician, bookish, urbane.
  18. Better be careful of your bookish approach, comrade.
  19. He was bookish, a swot and very close to his mother.
  20. Better be careful of your bookish approach, comrade.
  21. All the witches who'd lived in her cottage were bookish types.
  22. He was more bookish and intellectual than many of his fellow students.
  23. He was more bookish and intellectual than many of his fellow students.
  24. The bookish historian now accepts it, reluctantly and ungraciously enough.
  25. Anthony Hopkins plays a bookish billionaire with a head full of unused facts.
  26. Anthony Hopkins plays a bookish billionaire with a head full of unused facts.
  27. This bookish inclination at length determined by father to make me a printer.
  28. Nor is he an old-fashioned, bookish poet with antiquarian tendencies like Tennyson.
  29. Nor is he an old-fashioned, bookish poet with antiquarian tendencies like Tennyson.
  30. Never be so bookish and naive as to treat complex class struggle as a simple matter.
  31. Never be so bookish and naive as to treat complex class struggle as a simple matter.
  32. This is a further indication of the influence of bookish language on the spoken style.
  33. It should surely be essential for every school, library and bookish home in the country.
  34. It should surely be essential for every school, library and bookish home in the country.
  35. At this meeting Olga's bookish and countrified sister, Tatiana ( Tanya ) , falls in love with Onegin.
  36. A new intelligentsia, bold and active, has eliminated the old one, bookish and conservative; and it masters.
  37. A new intelligentsia, bold and active, has eliminated the old one, bookish and conservative; and it masters.
  38. But he returns often to several themes, foremost the idea that knowledge -- bookish knowledge -- is a form of power.
  39. This vision of intelligence asserts formal education and bookish excellence as the true measures of self - fulfillment.
  40. This vision of intelligence asserts formal education and bookish excellence as the true measures of self - fulfillment.
  41. The band is quietly leading a sincere revolution, knitting a genuine boyish irony and bookish intellectualism to instantly memorable songs.
  42. The band is quietly leading a sincere revolution, knitting a genuine boyish irony and bookish intellectualism to instantly memorable songs.
  43. Indeed, Chinese colleges are being corrupted by a combination of a stubborn emphasis on the old bookish knowledge and the recent running-out-of-control experiment with self-financing.
  44. Indeed, Chinese colleges are being corrupted by a combination of a stubborn emphasis on the old bookish knowledge and the recent running-out-of-control experiment with self-financing.

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Word of the day

abductor -
اغواء کرنے والا,اغواء کار,اغوا کنندہ
Someone who unlawfully seizes and detains a victim (usually for ransom).