This "toothy carlin" is a favourite figure in Celtic tradition.
There is no connection, save in the personage of the "toothy carlin," between the ballad and the folk-tale.
Quillan was conducted to the commodore and favored with an alarminglytoothy grin.
What I object to primarily is that the attempt was made without obtaining my consent, and secretly," Velladon was saying, with a toothy grin but in a voice that shook with open fury.
The boy was bright of eye, toothy of smile, gawky as only a teen-ager can be gawky, and obviously the proverbial apple of his father's eye.
And above them towered the toothypeaks of the glittering mountains, rising in pure white against the sunny blue.
His real reason for not turning up to house-fielding was that he considered himself above such things, and Firby-Smith a toothy weed.
There was no arguing against the fact that the head of the house was a toothy weed; but he felt a firm conviction that it would not be politic to say so.
The most independent men in the world, Mr. Conniston, are men like Brayley and Toothy and Rawhide Jones and the rest.
For the roan which he had selected fought at having the saddle thrown upon his back, so thatToothy had to lend a helping hand.
Both Rawhide Jones and Toothyhad to ride with him to drive them out of the gulches and back to the herd.
While Rawhide Jones and Toothy rode into one of the corrals Conniston was to sit his horse at the open gate, allowing the steers to run by him into the open, but heading off any of the smaller cattle.
Toothy rode swiftly into the knot of horses, scattered them, and, as they shot across the corral, sent his rope flying out over their heads.
In what was he better than Brayley, than Toothy even?
Rawhide Jones and Toothy as they rode were taking down the ropes coiled upon their saddles.
He wondered at the deliberate slowness with which Rawhide Jones andToothy began their errand.
A quick turn about the horn of his saddle, and Toothy set up his own horse.
Toothy was a little man, so stubborn, they said, that he even refused to let the sun brown his skin.
And Conniston, wondering vaguely what work the Sunday was to bring for him, turned silently and followed Rawhide and the man whom they called Toothy to the stables.
Rawhide and Toothy were "cutting them out" as best they could, urging the steers toward the gate, trying to keep the cows to the far side of the inclosure.
One man chuckled aloud, Toothy giggled like a girl, and the others grinned broadly.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "toothy" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.