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Definition of Bubble gum
1. Noun. A kind of chewing gum that can be blown into bubbles.
Definition of Bubble gum
1. Noun. (alternative form of bubblegum) ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Lexicographical Neighbors of Bubble Gum
Literary usage of Bubble gum
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Practical Ideas for Teaching Writing As a Process by Carol B. Olson (1996)
"Jose wanted some bubble gum. JJ Jose wanted some bubble gum. Maria wanted bubble gum
... [because] > We went to the store because we wanted some bubble gum. ..."
2. Building Fluency, Grade 1 by Compilation, Evan-Moor Educational Publishers, Gerald Tindal, Melanie Coon, Joy Evans, Marilyn Evans (2006)
"Name bubble gum bubble gum, bubble gum, chew and blow. bubble gum, bubble ...
bubble gum, bubble gum, tastes so sweet. Get that bubble gum off your feet! ..."
3. Smoke and Mirrors: The Canadian Tobacco War by Rob Cunningham (1996)
"Similarly, products like Big League Chew bubble gum legitimize the social ...
A child too young to smoke may see candy cigarettes or bubble gum wads as a ..."
4. The Ultimate Shape Book Grades K-2 by Evan-Moor Educational Publishers (2002)
"Elephants have big Elephants have little Independent Writers • The Day the Elephant
Chewed bubble gum Students imagine what would happen if an elephant ..."
5. "The Words Came Down!": English Language Learners Read, Write, And Talk ...by Emelie Lowrey Parker, Tess Haysham Pardini by Emelie Lowrey Parker, Tess Haysham Pardini (2006)
"... and Jessica are engrossed in independent reading from their book boxes.
out an innovation on the text of bubble gum. Without speaking, they pretend to ..."
6. The Civilization of Illiteracy by Mihai Nadin (1997)
"... Madonna or Heavy Metal (as music or comic books), Coca-Cola, the television
series Dallas, the incessant chomping on chewing gum and bubble-gum popping, ..."
7. Math Centers: Take It to Your Seat, Grades 4-6 by Wes Tuttle (2002)
"5 Ryan bought 12 pieces of bubble gum and 12 lollipops for the treat jar. If he
paid with a five-dollar bill, what change did he get back? ..."