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Examples
“Huvitav oli veel see, et umbes 7 erinevat inimest ilma kokkurääkimata tegid enamvähem ühesuguseid kadreeringuprohmakaid - peamiselt jätsid suures plaanis kukla taha liiga palju õhku ja oli tunne, et inimene tahab kiiresti minema ja räägib kellegi teisega.”
“He stopped calling his wife kukla, which meant “doll,” and began calling her kyria, which meant “Madame.””
“Sharon: Personally I can't wait for coach to get voted off. kukla: Behm will be a gazillionare after he publishes: After The Bubble Bursts - Taking your life back after ... kukla: Not an assault rifle - but, OK.”
“Remarkable that someone cared enough to take the frog to a vet and that the vet took the time to sew it back ... kukla: Everyone with any common sense knows the sun landings were faked to cover up JFKs assassination by the mob!”
“insan bir yeraltı den yaşayan ... burada kendi çocukluğundan edilmiştir ve bunların bacakları ve boyunları böylece taşıyamazsınız zincirleme var ve sadece onlardan önce görebiliyorum ... alçak bir duvar yol boyunca inşa edilmiş, perde gibi hangi kukla oyuncular önlerinde, üzerinde kukla gösterisi var.”
““Come on, kukla,” he’d say, “let’s cut the rug,” and we’d be off, the squat, plump father leading with confident, old-fashioned, fox-trot steps, and the awkward praying mantis of a daughter trying to follow along.”
“But Cadillacs don’t come from Europe anymore, kukla.”
Lists
These user-created lists contain the word ‘kukla’.
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Middlesex
Gleanings from Jeffrey Eugenides' 2002 book of that title.
kukla, kundalini, pantocrator, tsoureki, cruciform, rebetika, periphescence, phylloxera, raki, scrapyard, praying mantis, pilothouse and 38 more...
Tweets
Looking for tweets for kukla.

mollusque If Milton missed having a beautiful daughter, I never knew it. At weddings he still asked me to dance, regardless of how ridiculous we looked together. "Come on, kukla," he'd say, "let's cut the rug," and we'd be off, the squat, plump father leading with confident, old-fashioned, fox-trot steps, and the awkward praying mantis of a daughter trying to follow along.
--Jeffrey Eugenides, 2002, Middlesex, p. 305 Aug 16, 2008