Syrrha Frolicke, I am sure thou art not without some round or other; no doubt but Clunch can beare his part.
Welcome Clunch & good fellowes al that come with my good man; for my good mans sake come on, sit downe; here is a peece of cheese & a pudding of my owne making.
Why I am Clunch the Smith; what are you, what make you in my territories at this time of the night?
The church is very ancient; it is cruciform, of flint andclunch stone.
Note the clunch walls and mullioned windows, in one of which, designed in stained glass, are the armorial bearings of three former owners.
Right in the clunch you'll find their nest, and as many as ten young 'uns in'n.
That's it though, 'pend upon it; right up in the clunch o' that bough.
A little wisp o' grass somewhere in the clunch (fork) of a tree .
Clunch is found in many places throughout the county and has been worked (as existing remains show) ever since Roman days.
The abaci of the Early English capitals in the main arcade are of Barnack stone, which is harder than clunch and so more suitable for bearing a weight.
There is much clunch stone used in the interior and this is in a good state of preservation, but any that has been used externally has decayed.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "clunch" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.