Any aspirant nation found not to be clubbable will find itself out in the cold. |
|
Those who have worked with him describe him as work-obsessed, ambitious, focused, not particularly clubbable. |
|
Indeed, it would be hard to think of a more clubbable bunch than the society of nations, with their endless get-togethers and busman's holidays. |
|
His predecessor rarely set foot in the White Heather Club, but he is a clubbable kind of chap. |
|
He claims to be very shy but as chums such as friends testify, he is perfectly clubbable. |
|
Freddie is a decent, clubbable type struggling to survive in the emotional deep end. |
|
There he is surrounded by a salon of interesting people he has collected, including the eminently clubbable journalist, Sneath. |
|
Lean, trim and a little severe, he has never been the most clubbable of men. |
|
But this belongs to days of the magic circle choosing the most clubbable old boy. |
|
Warsi was thought insufficiently clubbable, which was inevitable when her agenda was to change the club culture. |
|
Rinôçérôse certainly couldn't be accused of churning out electro for the young, clubbable end of the market! |
|
The clubbable, whisky-quaffing, poodle-cuddling Mr Musharraf is no fundamentalist. |
|
There is the sense behind everything he says that his own palpable solitariness, within his charming and clubbable exterior, is not up for examination. |
|
Druidism can be seen as another quasi-Masonic phenomenon, and druids of this ilk are on a par with any other odd fellows, their aim being clubbable mutual assistance rather than mystical transcendence. |
|
Coyle and Roberto Younger, sexier, track record, more But simply clubbable off it. |
|
Why then does the most clubbable country in Europe have no label association? |
|
But people are looking deeper and realising that the clubbable bloke with a pint is just like any other public school posh boy on the make. |
|
Apparently in person he's very funny, very clubbable, very amusing and sophisticated. |
|
The result is a sort of Darwinian natural selection that ensures corporate, clubbable journalists rise to the top and select in their image those who follow behind them. |
|
Whether or not you end up accepting Oakeshott's vision of a civilised, clubbable society as achievable or even attractive, Mr Franco's fine introduction shows, on the contrary, what a tough and wily thinker he was. |
|
|
He had retired, or been retired, early from the diplomatic corps, lacking the clubbable personality that rose easily through the Foreign Office hierarchy. |
|
It's the fault of the system, which is far too clubbable, far too cosy. |
|
A growing lobby would like to see Aussie one-day captain George Bailey, a much more clubbable character, take the reins across all formats, according to the report. |
|