US /ˈnuˈfæŋɡəld, ˈnju-/
・UK /ˌnju:ˈfæŋgld/
Pringles were originally called "Pringles Newfangled Potato Chips".
method, me with a goatee is probably saying, "Yeah, you know, this newfangled torch method
We get a little knackered by using this newfangled date V8 to rubbish, you see?
Even if you get one of those newfangled self-driving cars, still a good idea to wear a seatbelt.
Even if you get one of those newfangled self driving cars, it’s still a good idea to
It was here that the newfangled guillotine, considered a humane form of execution in its day, was set up.
IT WAS HERE THAT THE NEWFANGLED GUILLOTINE,
Procter & Gamble initially marketed them as Pringles Newfangled Potato Chips, and their novel appeal quickly brought some unexpected scrutiny.
Procter & Gamble initially marketed them as "Pringles Newfangled Potato Chips," and their novel appeal quickly brought some unexpected scrutiny.
But at the very same time, British biophysicist Gene Hanson and Hugh Esmore Huxley, an American biologist who had no relation to the famous British Huxleys, were using another newfangled tool, the electron microscope.
According to Delish, they were originally sold as "Newfangled Potato Chips" before being rebranded Pringles.
-Pringles Newfangled Potato Chips.
These two forces seemed to share a curious relationship that inventors like Samuel Morse were taking advantage of in newfangled devices such as the telegraph.
You see, movie theaters were seen as a newfangled version of the classic theater, which has a distinctly fancy feel to it.