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cabbies

n. (cabby English)

Usage examples of "cabbies".

The cabbies are all Saturnians who aren't even sure whether this is a right planet or a left planet.

Now this was Eighth Street, just west of Fifth Avenue, high colour in the August arroyo, and many cabs and Honolulu-shirted cabbies, and jungle movement in its full shimmer of attraction and warning.

In fact, two overcurious cabbies were told that he was a sick man, and that, ironically enough, backfired upon them.

Together, after playing a little part for the benefit of the afore-mentioned cabbies, they head for the Dunham department store, and now all three are together.

The cabbies, to whom the Shekt girl had described Schwartz as being sick, speculated on Radiation Fever.

It was a nice idea, Americans calling everyone sir, addressing everyonewaiters, cabbies, toilet attendants, serial murdersas sir.

Moreover, the cabbies plying the lucrative Heathrow run do so according to a strict and jealously guarded rotation system.

It was impossible to hire a hansom cab anywhere in Spitalfields—not only were the residents too poor to afford the fares, cabbies were leery of robbery from East End gangs.

Skeeter said as the horse jolted around a corner and swung smartly into heavy traffic, nearly colliding with two carriages and a drayman's wagon and eliciting rude commentaries from cabbies they narrowly avoided while rounding a traffic circus Skeeter didn't recognize.

The cabbies, in contrast to the merchant, knew what was what, knew that none of it really meant anything, or meant everything but in a way we wouldn't ever really understand.

And so at the Orangeline Tstop we grab a fat cab to about two blocks from Hung Toys and screw out of the cab at a light and the thing with fat cabbies is they cant' run after you and Poor Tony is pisser to watch tearassing it down the street in hiheels with a feather stoal.

I got to notice what I'm sure you've noticed long ago, I know, I know you've seen me brought home on occasions, dragged in the door, under what's called the Influence, son, helped in by cabbies at night, I've seen your long shadow grotesquely backlit at the top of the house's stairs I helped pay for, boy: how the drunk and the maimed both are dragged forward out of the arena like a boneless Christ, one man under each arm, feet dragging, eyes on the aether.

One of the cabbies reached for his plate and said, 'That's me, my love.