Similar words: booking, bookings, advance booking, cookbook, cookie, rookie, look in, rakish. Meaning: ['bukɪʃ] adj. characterized by diligent study and fondness for reading.
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31. I'm not surprised that Mary has married Jack and they are both rather silent bookish people.
32. Like begets like , and they are both rather silent bookish people.
33. Although his female colleagues insisted the grayaccentuated his bookish appeal, Langdon knew better.
34. In this modern time, even and friends might laugh at his bookish and clinging.
35. Chinese culture endowed itself with abundant bookish and romantic wisdom and moral teaching, yet when it comes to practice it has always been a dwarf of meagerness.
36. Bookish in in the show,[sentencedict.com/bookish.html] in the weak and strong in the shows.
37. He also criticized the concepts, methods, and goals of the bookish scholars.
38. For when the schools depart from the educational conditions effective in the out-of-school environment, they necessarily substitute a bookish, a pseudo-intellectual spirit for a social spirit.
39. A bookish bunch, the office members work in an ivy-covered building out of three rooms lined with books and musty card-catalog drawers.
40. The poor girl liked to be thought clever, but she hated to be thought bookish.
More similar words: booking, bookings, advance booking, cookbook, cookie, rookie, look in, rakish, looking, cooking, pinkish, mawkish, hawkish, puckish, peckish, look into, brackish, looking at, looking for, book, cooking oil, overlooking, good-looking, hawkishness, fortune cookie, looking glass, book for, book up, to book, booked.