carnival sharpers eager to relieve the yokels of their money
Recent Examples on the WebYet as Russian war atrocities have become more evident, and Ukraine’s need for heavy armor has increased, the lines have grown blurrier and the rhetoric sharper. David E. Sanger, New York Times, 25 Apr. 2022 Both offer blistering acceleration and sharper handling than the standard model. Eric Stafford, Car and Driver, 19 Feb. 2021 Where Super Mario 64 suffers is in its environmental textures, which don't appear to have been redrawn to look any sharper on higher-resolution screens. Kyle Orland, Ars Technica, 16 Sep. 2020 For example, there is the Butch Lewis Act, which has nothing at all to do with boxing but, rather, is a bill to protect private pensions from being looted by corporate sharpers. Charles P. Pierce, Esquire, 20 Jan. 2018 The payday-lending industry is a parasite on people who, for whatever reason, can’t establish themselves with the various sharpers in our mainstream banking industry. Charles P. Pierce, Esquire, 17 Jan. 2018 Other sharpers were Doc Frame, Major James S. Showers and Colonel Rickett, who ran the Senate Saloon. Darryl Levings, kansascity, 26 Jan. 2018 And the aboveground economy will remain the province of the unindicted sharpers who did such a great job with it in 2008. Charles P. Pierce, SI.com, 30 Sep. 2017 The sophomore from Colleyville has been a touch sharper on field goals than Jonathan Song in the fall practices. Carlos Mendez, star-telegram, 14 Aug. 2017 See More