1. cobble - Noun
2. cobble - Verb
3. Cobble - Proper noun
A fishing boat. See Coble.
Cob coal. See under Cob.
To make or mend coarsely; to patch; to botch; as, to cobble shoes.
To make clumsily.
To pave with cobblestones.
Source: Webster's dictionaryOur solutions provide something that is 100% right, all the time. That is the idea. The cobbled together gunk never does [...] It's unfortunate the application-level people are all caught up in cobble, cobble, cobble and just never learn how to evolve. Theo de Raadt
It used to be you needed to have a very large sophisticated state before you could even have a nuclear weapon... Now the technology is widespread enough. It doesn't take very many people to be able to cobble together a devastating attack, and all it takes is one. Dick Cheney
3006. It is often easier to make new, than to cobble up the old. Thomas Fuller (writer)
I feel I do my best work when it's all there on the page, and I feel that the character is very vivid as I read the script and I'm not having to create stuff and trying to cobble together something. If I have to do that, then I don't entirely trust what I'm doing. Guy Pearce
In the computer industry, you've got an interdisciplinary team of people who can come together, attack the problem, and work in a collaborative style. You knock down one problem after another, cobble things together, and then hopefully turn the crank at some point. Paul Allen
cobble shoes Source: Internet