a. (UN-1 7 b.)

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  Hence, in recent use, unclubbability.

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1764[?].  Johnson, in Mme. D’Arblay, Diary (1842), I. 66. Sir John was a most unclubable man!

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1859.  Sala, Tw. round Clock (1861), 215. Moreover, they are a people who drink standing,… a most unclubable characteristic.

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1867.  E. Yates, Forlorn Hope, x. Kilsyth is not popular at Barnes’s, being decidedly an unclubbable man.

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1891.  Harper’s Mag. LXXXII. Jan., 313/2. Must not a club-man who demonstrates his essential and congenital unclubbability be metaphorically clubbed?

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