Sentence examples for fatso from inspiring English sources

The word 'fatso' is not considered appropriate or polite for use in written English
In addition to being offensive, it is considered slang. There are more polite, appropriate words that you can use when referring to someone who is overweight. For example, you could say, "He is a large person."

Dictionary

fatso

noun

Someone who is overweight.

Exact(60)

The star-studded cast included Clift as a rebellious private, Frank Sinatra as his charming but luckless wise-guy buddy, Burt Lancaster as their sympathetic sergeant, Deborah Kerr as the sergeant's mistress and wife of his commanding officer, and Ernest Borgnine as the loathsome military jailer Fatso.

Ernest Borgnine first made a major impact when he played the sadistic Sergeant "Fatso" Judson, who persecutes and later beats to death an Italian private, played by Frank Sinatra, in From Here to Eternity (1953).

I feel lucky when I think about my little fatso goofball self".

Walking up the Green Hill on a Bayreuth afternoon or crossing the River Salzach at twilight is somehow more conducive to the contemplation of sublimity than riding the No. 1 train at rush hour while two squabbling strangers call each other "fatso" and "bitch," as happened to me on the way to "Götterdämmerung".

Dear friends of childhood, classmates, thank you, scant hundred of you, for providing a sufficiency of human types: beauty, bully, hanger-on, natural, twin, and fatso — all a writer needs, all there in Shillington, its trolley cars and little factories, cornfields and trees, leaf fires, snowflakes, pumpkins, valentines.

"Not a fatso in the bunch".

Those who have had a bit too much monolithic tree mushroom stem squid could find themselves requiring roomier attire: extra-large sizes sometimes come in "fatso" or "lard bucket" categories.

After Brodeur and Avery snub each other in handshake line, Avery says, "Fatso there just forgot to shake my hand".

The operator was Fred LaGattuta, a retired diesel mechanic and self-described "fatso who likes to eat," whose other projects included a budget-minded bowling alley and a motel and diner near Parksville with $49.99 rooms.

Saint-Saëns, in his correspondence, referred to Henry as "a sausage on legs" and even more rudely as "fatso" ("petit gros"), but musically he presents the king as a dignified if complex figure who gets precisely what he wants, both as a manipulative lover and as a politically savvy hands-on king.

The News retaliated with a front-page headline, "Who you calling an idiot, fatso!"; unflattering Christie pictures; and a Mike Lupica column, "Attack of the Blob: Pick On Someone Your Own Size," with a subhead, "Manish vs. the Meatball".

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