Bauble in a sentence as a noun

Functionally, this includes me. My best friend isn't a bauble.

They are disgusted by the "proletariat" and his need to buy the latest bauble even while claiming to be fighting for him.

Now it's a ridiculous bauble that can barely keep time despite constant expensive maintenance.

If that sale was going through today, it would probably be a $200 million to $500 million acquisition instead of the $50 million bauble they got at the time.

Coke's patent on that is not on the invention of a bottle, or on a useless bauble, but on the ornamental design of a functional item.

A waterdrop world with industrial processes would be a Culture-like bauble since there's nothing to base the processes upon but water.

Management can hire 2 fresh grads, roughly same cost as 1 senior candidate Then 18 months later, both cheap, fresh grads would be gone, chasing the first shinier bauble dangled by a competitor.

It seems to me that part of a go-to-market strategy needs, at least in the short term, to help potential customers transition from "that's a really shiny bauble" to "I understand how this is going to make me money.

If you don't then exchange that shiny bauble for the output of some other people, what was the point of doing all that work in the first place?You may as well have used your productivity to have Friday off instead and gone fishing.

How can someone who is miserable be described as a "success" no matter how many baubles they collect or how many accolades they receive from their fellow bauble collectors?To me being successful means being content and leading a happy and rich life.

Bauble definitions

noun

a mock scepter carried by a court jester

noun

cheap showy jewelry or ornament on clothing

See also: bangle gaud gewgaw novelty fallal trinket