Jowl in a sentence as a noun

Nerds and blue collar folk lived tooth by jowl.

Who the **** wants to live cheek by jowl with other people if they don't have to?

Good areas and bad areas are often cheek by jowl.

All signaling, no substance, tons of useless recreational space, engineers packed in cheek-by-jowl.

Amazing battery life, Fedora 28, touchpad small but ****** is brilliant on the train when i'm cheek-to-jowl with the guy next to me who's also on a laptop.

The fact that people with deeply held but opposite political convictions are cheek by jowl all across the country is part of what makes it so difficult to resolve disagreements.

Americans who settle in leafy, low-density suburbs will leave a significantly deeper carbon footprint, it turns out, than Americans who live cheek by jowl in urban towers.

We're probably both right, which implies that we're moving in interestingly different bubbles.> Introverts may as well find another line of work, especially since you will in most cases be working cheek-by-jowl with your co-workers at long noisy tablesAgain, our experience is completely different.

After all if you’re living cheek to jowl in dickensian conditions you might be inclined to see the boss as your enemy, but if you leave the workplace everyday and head back to your own property in a suburb, where the boss has a house nearby, with your 401k being your retirement plan, then perhaps less so.

Jowl definitions

noun

the jaw in vertebrates that is hinged to open the mouth

See also: mandible mandibula submaxilla jawbone

noun

a fullness and looseness of the flesh of the lower cheek and jaw (characteristic of aging)