Sentences with word «sackable»

The word "sackable" means someone or something that can be fired or let go from their job. Full definition
Countless sackable offences were committed in past few years.
The mistake, though, is to chain that dynasty to the identity of the manager, who is always the most sackable person at the club.
If there is any truth to this rumour then that is an instant sackable offence.rvp & cesc was bad enough.there will be riots next season if he does this.i don't expect wenger to last till xmas!
Thst this man is STILL HERE poncing huge unearned wages is criminal and yet another reason on Wenger's long list of sackable reasons.
He's still sackable regardless, you know.
Politicians may be imperfect - no, they are imperfect - but they are ultimately sackable.
Only KOS has been a proven success and Wenger has completly ignored those two gaping holes in key position for almost a decade now, which is sackable.
This alone is a sackable offense.
Allowing Cesc to go to a rival was a sackable offence, who would you rather have in your squad for the city game, Cesc or «fall to the ground or run at a wall of defenders» Jack?
Now That would be a sackable offence lol?
I don't know if it's Bould or Wenger or both but to watch our defensive exposure week in week out and do nothing about it should be a sackable offense
How Newcastle have zero players in that team, surely is a sackable offence.
he gave these drunk uneducated muppets here the illusion that Arsenal was soem Real Madrid where failure to win the title or the champions league constituted a sackable offence
Last year Robin Van Persie pretty much downed tools — a disgrace in itself and surely a sackable offence when you consider the money this man is on and the millions he dares to pretend to represent across the world.
It always seemed unlikely United would launch a true title charge but anything outside the Champions League places would have been unacceptable and arguably a sackable offence
«It was true that the readership was at the very centre of that paper,» she explained, adding that «it's almost a sackable offence to be rude to a reader».
«It's almost a sackable offence to be rude to a reader,» she explains.
But the question that really strikes me is this: If Bandow's relatively minor ethical lapse is a sackable offence, how can Cato continue to harbour Steve Milloy?

Phrases with «sackable»

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