But the waitress spotted him and got very
snippy about him only being allowed to stand in the garden, not on the tiles beside it.
I'm not even going to get
snippy about the controls; you're told up front you're best off with a pad but the keyboard control system isn't hideous when you get the hang of it.
I mentioned it to an author once (on facebook), after I'd bought several of her books that were riddled with typos, and she got
all snippy about «that's what happens when you read pirated books.»
I first read a number of articles there which I thought were pretty reasonable and interesting, and then I discovered a blog post which was kind of uppity /
snippy about Stefani's article here, and I thought that particular post was unnecessarily dismissive and narrow - minded.
And as Ryan Martin, PhD, points out, it pretty much ensures you'll feel constantly interrupted and
snippy about it.
Find something to get
snippy about, some reason to cross your arms over your chest and stubbornly leave them there until the bell rings and you are able to run out of the classroom, shoving bewildered teenagers out of your desperate path to escape.
Well, don't get
snippy about it, but I will.
Not exact matches
These arguments invariably devolve into
snippy exchanges
about the Genesis version of creation and unfold in a rhetorical no - man's - land somewhere between King James and Watson and Crick.
Have a great time Although riding with a passenger is far too easy to get
snippy with each other, remember that the whole point of this kind of riding is
about to date with a biker babe, to enjoy the countryside and freedom.
A romantic comedy
about lazy rich people on holiday in Italy in the 1930s, it stars Helen Hunt as a gold - digging woman «of a certain age» who's stalking a young married couple — for third - act catharsis reasons you can see coming — and causing
snippy, gossipy society people to make
snippy, gossipy comments.
As the guests wander obliviously around the sealed chest, the killers make
snippy, veiled comments
about their deed — never going so far as to reveal the existence of the body nor their involvement in the murder.
Today in «older actors from beloved franchises getting kinda
snippy with the press
about reboots» news, Michael Keaton and William Shatner are... well, doing that.