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Discover LudwigThe word "Rambunctious" is correct and usable in written English
It is typically used to describe someone or something that is noisy, energetic, and difficult to control, often in a playful manner. Example: "The rambunctious children ran around the playground, laughing and shouting with joy." Alternatives include "boisterous" or "rowdy."
Dictionary
Rambunctious
adjective
Energetic, noisy, boisterous and difficult to control.
Exact(60)
When I tell you that two of the main themes of the novel are drug abuse (meth) and sexual violence (rape) Crank makes for a rambunctious ride.
He was just loving and caring, funny, rambunctious, active, athletic".
Whereas Peter Mead, his rambunctious partner in the Abbott Mead Vickers agency, founded in 1977, installed a garish Wurlitzer, Abbott cultivated a donnish,, almost sacerdotal, air.
"Based on the diary, I was a very rambunctious child," he said.
Tom Harrison may be widely respected as a sports executive but is now being forensically tested in public by a combination of the 24-hour media cycle, a rambunctious and spirited PR campaign by Pietersen and his outriders and the mistakes of his predecessors (not least the decision to "sack" Pietersen in the first place).
As Keane points out, Cantona was not a rambunctious leader: "Cantona led by his presence more than anything else – his charisma.
His retirement on January 2nd not only deprives American politics of one of its most rambunctious characters.
Though the rambunctious last night, with its streamers, balloons and patriotic hymns, gives a strange idea of what the Proms are about, no music festival anywhere has such an eclectic and pioneering programme.
On the day of Mr Blair's stage-managed election announcement, the Conservative leader launched his campaign with some rambunctious soap-box oratory on a high street in Watford, north of London.
Conventional English history sees Henry through a rose-tinted haze: a rambunctious old dog whose type-alpha personality had the happy effect of freeing England from the tyranny of papal authority.
Call in the feds www.democracy.com A dangerous moment A hundred rambunctious days ReprintsOne reason for worry is that last November's triumph was, in fact, a qualified one.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com