English language

How to pronounce clubbing in English?

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Type Words
Type of symptom

Examples of clubbing

clubbing
If they want to go clubbing every night, they need to get that money separately.
From the independent.co.uk
A date that involves a flowers, intellectual conversation and a bit of clubbing?
From the expressandstar.com
No more swilling down the vin rouge while clubbing demonstrators to the ground.
From the mirror.co.uk
She waits by the phone for him to call while he goes clubbing with his friends.
From the bostonherald.com
For clubbing, Catania is a beautiful city with great nightclubs in the port area.
From the guardian.co.uk
Located underneath the Three Crowns pub, this is intimate clubbing at its best.
From the guardian.co.uk
Moving into Birmingham and there seems to be something for all clubbing tastes.
From the expressandstar.com
Anderson returned to send a straight ball through Shahid Afridi's clubbing swipe.
From the guardian.co.uk
Clubbing on Ibiza has become the favourite summer holiday for Britain's youth.
From the economist.com
More examples
  • Baseball club: a team of professional baseball players who play and travel together; "each club played six home games with teams in its own division"
  • Unite with a common purpose; "The two men clubbed together"
  • A formal association of people with similar interests; "he joined a golf club"; "they formed a small lunch society"; "men from the fraternal order will staff the soup kitchen today"
  • Gather and spend time together; "They always club together"
  • Stout stick that is larger at one end; "he carried a club in self defense"; "he felt as if he had been hit with a club"
  • Strike with a club or a bludgeon
  • A club is an association of two or more people united by a common interest or goal. A service club, for example, exists for voluntary or charitable activities; there are clubs devoted to hobbies and sports, social activities clubs, political and religious clubs, and so forth.
  • Club (or Kensitas Club as it was once known), is a brand of cigarette distributed by Gallaher tobacco and available only in the United Kingdom.
  • A truncheon or baton (also called a cosh, Paddy wacker, billystick, b'tawn, billy club, nightstick, sap, blackjack, stick) is essentially a stick of less than arm's length, usually made of wood, plastic, or metal, and carried by law-enforcement, corrections, security, and (less often) military ...