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Meaning of Cobbler | Babel Free

Noun CEFR B1
ˈkɒblə

Definitions

  1. Often preceded by a descriptive word as in apple cobbler, peach cobbler, etc.: a kind of pie, usually filled with fruit, originally having a crust at the base but nowadays generally lacking this and instead topped with a thick, cake-like pastry layer.
    US
  2. A person who repairs, and sometimes makes, shoes.
  3. A testicle.
    Cockney, in-plural, slang
  4. An (iced) alcoholic drink containing spirit or wine, with lemon juice and sugar.
    US
  5. A roadworker who lays cobbles.
  6. The shiny, hard seed of the horse chestnut tree (Aesculus hippocastanum), especially when used in the game of the same name (sense 1.2); a conker, a horse chestnut.
  7. Used as a name for various animals.
  8. Also estuary cobbler:
  9. The South Australian catfish (Cnidoglanis macrocephalus), a species of catfish native to Australia which has dorsal and pectoral fins bearing sharp, venomous spines.
  10. A person from Northamptonshire (traditionally a centre for shoemaking)
  11. Nonsense.
  12. A sheep left to the end to be sheared (for example, because its wool is filthy, or because it is difficult to catch).
    Australia, New-Zealand, slang
  13. Synonym of conkers (“a game for two players in which the participants each have a horse-chestnut (known as a cobbler (sense 1.1) or conker) suspended from a length of string, and take turns to strike their opponent's conker with their own with the object of destroying the opponent's conker before their own is destroyed”).
  14. The soldier or South Australian cobbler (Gymnapistes marmoratus), a brown fish native to southern Australian estuaries which is not closely related to Cnidoglanis macrocephalus, but also has venemous spines on its dorsal and pectoral fins.
  15. A person who cobbles (“to assemble or mend in an improvised or rough way”); a clumsy workman.
  16. Also river cobbler: basa (Pangasius bocourti), an edible species of shark catfish native to the Chao Phraya and Mekong river basins in Southeast Asia.
  17. Pangas catfish (Pangasius pangasius), an edible species of shark catfish native to Bangladesh, India, Myanmar, and Pakistan.
  18. Condica sutor, an owlet moth native to North America.
    US
  19. A police officer.
    plural-normally, slang

Equivalents

العربية إسكاف الإسكافي
Azərbaycanca çəkməçi
Български ченге́
Bosanski varga варга
Català sabater sabatera
Cymraeg crydd
Dansk skomager
Esperanto botisto ŝuisto
فارسی کفاش
Gàidhlig greusaiche
Galego zapateiro
ગુજરાતી મોચી
हिन्दी चमार मोची
Hrvatski varga варга
Հայերեն կոշկակար
日本語 靴屋 靴直し
ქართული მეწაღე ხარაზი
Kurdî sûn sûn
Lëtzebuergesch Schouster
Latviešu apavniece apavnieks kurpniece kurpnieks
Македонски кондураџија чевлар
Português sapateira sapateiro
Română caldarâmgiu ciubotar cizmar pantofar
Српски varga варга
Türkçe ayakkabıcı eskici

Examples

“This honest Cobler has done what he might: / That Statesmen in their Shoes might walk upright. / But rotten Shoes of Spannish running-leather: / No Coblers skill, can stitch them strong together.”
“[W]hat would they think of a French cobler cutting ſhoes for ſeveral of his fellow-ſubjects out of an old apple-tree?”
“All honeſt jogg trotmen, who go on ſmoothly and dully, and write hiſtory and politics, and are praiſed; and who, had they been bred coblers, would all their lives have only mended ſhoes, but never made them.”
“But what of that vast number of the human kind who were always in the background? What of the hewers of wood and drawers of water, the swineherds, the shepherds, the carpenters, the hedgers and cobblers?”
“Truely Sir, in reſpect of a fine Workman, / I am but as you would ſay, a Cobler.”
“[H]e produced a very large tumbler, piled up to the brim with little blocks of clear transparent ice, through which one or two thin slices of lemon, and a golden liquid of delicious appearance, appeared from the still depths below, to the loving eye of the spectator. […] "This wonderful invention, sir," said Mark, tenderly patting the empty glass, "is called a cobbler. Sherry cobbler when you name it long; cobbler, when you name it short.[…]"”
“In the creed of Asirvadam the Brahmin, the drinker of strong drink is a Pariah, and the eater of cow's flesh is damned already. If, then, he can tell a cocktail from a cobbler, and scientifically discriminate between a julep and a gin-sling, it must be because the Vedas are unclasped to him; for in the Vedas all things are taught.”
“It was very hot when Captain Littledale was here; he did nothing but drink sherry cobblers.”
“["A]n' 'e was mad, an' so he snatched my cobbler an' run off with it. An' so I run after 'im, an' when I was gettin' hold of him, 'e dodged, an' it ripped 'is collar. But I got my cobbler—" He pulled from his pocket a black old horse-chestnut hanging on a string. This old cobbler had "cobbled"—hit and smashed—seventeen other cobblers on similar strings. So this boy was proud of his veteran.”
“Fished for cobblers in the evening. The warbler sings its night-song.”
“Look out: it’s the cobblers!”
“I have selected a few dishes, and made out a little bill of fare, which will go home in the steamer that precedes me, and be hot when I arrive—as follows: […] Apple puffs, Southern style. Peach cobbler, Southern style. Peach pie. American mince pie.”
“The Al Qaeda online magazine 'Inspire' has a recipe for a homemade bomb. They also have a recipe for a pretty darn good peach cobbler.”

CEFR level

B1
Intermediate
This word is part of the CEFR B1 vocabulary — intermediate level.
See all B1 English words →

See also

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