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Have a word is just a basic jobby.
You should've taken a copter instead of that hot jobby.
You have no chance in that jobby!"
-He did a jobby, I told them all.
Recently changed cars - the old one was 12 years' old and have bought myself a 3-year old jobby to replace it.
This face lift jobby.
A camel's jobby.
'He's about as welcome as a jobby in a swimming pool.'
"Hope I get a jobby," Gord tells himself.
A little hand- held jobby, much like its kissing cousin the Nintendo Game Boy, but with a print-legible screen.
When the latter made a substantial offer, Derry City offered Jobby a payment deal which he rejected, offering his own.
And surprise, surprise, across the street, across the street making its turn forty yards away, was a large, four-axle jobby.
He would die of heart-failure before morning, like old Captain Jobby who tried to climb through a gate when he was drunk, and stuck there.
I hae jist the last stroke to gie this bit jobby.'
Partly as a result of these misfortunes, young Sherwood became adept at finding various odd jobs to help his family, which earned him the nickname "Jobby".
When the Sunderland negotiations broke down, Derry City dropped Jobby, who signed for Coleraine.
After his playing days, Jobby had a spell in management and took the top job at League of Ireland club, Sligo Rovers.
In January 1959, a commission of inquiry imposed small fines on Derry and Coleraine, but banned Jobby from all forms of football for life.
Originally wrote by Sean(Jobby)Mc Ginley from Castlefinn, Co.
The only other people in the small Jobby were the super and a guy who lived on the second floor, but they were staring, not wanting to miss a second of the excitement.
Derry City, still aggrieved by Jobby's actions, reported themselves to the Football League authorities for technical breaches of regulations, thus ensuring that Jobby would face disciplinary action.
John Andrew Crossan (born 29 November 1938), commonly known as Jobby or Johnny Crossan, is a Northern Irish author, radio sports analyst, entrepreneur, and former football player.
In 1963, Jobby returned to football in the UK (following the lifting of his 'life-time' ban) when he was signed by Sunderland, with whom he made it to the old First Division.
But, maybe it's all this blog jobby and all the stuff that I learn here or maybe I'm getting soft now I'm 50, I get what's going on in this solo and I like watching him do it.
Makes me wonder how may other talented dancers, in any company, just kick their heels on the subs bench until some teacher rides into town and recognises their talent - or is that just one of the hazards of the old ballet jobby?