View example sentences and word forms for Playthings.

Playthings

Playthings | Plaything

Playthings meaning

plural of plaything

Example sentences (16)

He said he would take the issue of education and playthings up with the Home Office.

Meet all the notorious suspects and discover all their foul playthings.

Nearly three in five children (57%), aged six to 12 years old, are keen to get their hands on the latest playthings – with LEGO, water pistols, and toy vehicles among the most popular.

Rob Noyes, divestment campaigner and researcher at Platform, said: “Investments in dirty fossil fuels turn public sector savings into fossil fuel playthings, pumping billions of pounds through the pensions pipeline into climate-wrecking fossil fuels.

Since Jeep debuted the go-anywhere, do-anything Wrangler for the 1987 model year, owners have been comfortable making extensive modifications to their rugged, boxy playthings.

The rest are playthings, even Olga, which is part of her downfall.

They regularly indulge in acts of cruelty, treating commoners as mere playthings and slaves.

This would be enough for most folks, but Kang clearly adhered to the policy that idle hands are the devil's playthings.

Playthings, Naef and Ambi Toys were the platforms where he served as an exclusive in-house designer for over 25 years.

Andy goes off to college and must leave childhood, and its playthings, behind.

Dump trucks, dolls and plastic playthings fill plywood shelves and primary-colored bins.

It shows Castle as a gross provocateur, an aberration of every CEO that sees people below him as playthings to be used, to be made fun of, to be broken and discarded at will.

We Ate the Necco WafersWomen are becoming increasingly aware that our bodies are a lot more than the visual or sexual playthings.

Chances are you’ve got a couple of boxes stacked away in your attic or a storage space that are filled with your favorite playthings from your childhood.

I worked out years later that all the music I had been hearing came from these big playthings,” she says.

By 1856 a northern provincial newspaper contained an advert alluding casually to them, “Now the best Christmas box/You can give to the young/Is not toys, nor fine playthings,/Nor trees gaily hung.