Sentences with phrase «pouty about»

Did I tell you about the time that my husband and I started a painting project that neither of us wanted to do and I had to prep the whole project by myself, and he was pouty about having to help and then SOMEHOW got a piece of tape on his foot and didn't know it and RIPPED UP ALL OF MY PREP WORK IN ABOUT FIVE MINUTES FLAT after we had just started and didn't even realize until I turned around and he had wads of newspaper around his feet and didn't even know it?
I couldn't go to my regular plastic surgeon, the one who removed the granuloma on my forehead (a red blob that grew during my pregnancies — the sexiness just keeps on oozing) and gave me all the free botox, because I'm worried he'll be pouty about injecting someone who became a housewife rather than spreading the word about his fabulous services throughout the media.
Now this is compared to Roman / Brock where Roman lost just like Shinsuke, but instead of snapping like Nak, he was sad and pouty about finding out he had another championship match online.

Not exact matches

Although obviously I am sure Jack Kerouac wasn't thinking about a pouty Chilean football player when he wrote those lines in the much - praised book On the Road.
But in play, kids decide what to do and how to do it (how to capture the monster, for example), and how to solve problems (anything from what to do about Nick's skinned knee to how to include a pouty playmate who feels left out).
So far this week, I've cried about doing the dishes, acted pouty at work, cried again during a TV show, and am currently attempting to eat my weight in cheese or cheesy things.
Young agent Hunt teases pouty agent Claire (Emmanuelle Beart) about her coffee.
Toni Collette (The Hours, About a Boy) seems like she could steal some scenes with an over-the-top performance as a vain starlet, but even her character has nothing much to do but primp and act pouty.
Psychologists have used the term Passive - Aggressive Personality Disorder (PAPD) as a label to characterize people who are chronically stubborn, pouty, sulky, irritable, procrastinating, and argumentative.1 More recently, PAPD was renamed Negativistic Personality Disorder to include other negative behaviors, such as complaining about being misunderstood, envy of others, and exaggerated complaints of personal misfortune.2 Both terms have been controversial; some psychologists believe that many of the symptoms only occur in certain situations (or certain relationships) and do not reflect an underlying pervasive personality trait that the person carries with them across relationships.3
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