sulky造句1. He put on a sulky expression.
2. Sarah had looked sulky all morning.
3. She brought along a couple of sulky looking kids.
4. He lapsed into a sulky silence.
5. Katherine sat in a sulky silence.
6. I was quite sulky, so I didn't take part in much.
7. She brought along a couple of sulky looking kids who didn't say a word all evening.
8. With sulky faces, the students turned to go.
9. On the drive home, Maria was sulky and said very little.
10. William was a sulky little boy who seemed to care for nothing except his video games.
11. The girls looked a little less sulky and stared at the two townees.
12. He went to town by a sulky.
13. Young girls sometimes become sulky because they are jealous.
14. The child is a shade sulky.
15. I should have been sulky and mean.
16. Philip passed off her sulky reply with a laugh.
17. He was very sulky about it indeed.
18. Warrington laughed loudly so that Pen grew sulky.
19. She is stubborn, sulky and contrary where her music is concerned.
20. Old Mr. Bouncer, very sulky, was huddled up in a corner, barricaded with chair.
21. Marilyn was a complete child, playful and skittish one moment, sulky and withdrawn the next.
22. The Lorrimores had arrived, each wearing yesterday's expression: pleasant, aloof, supercilious, sulky.
23. The opposition in the state legislature, Rajiv Gandhi's Congress Party, is rather sulky over the achievement.
24. These phases should be short and not involve the parent being sulky for half a day.
25. Although she didn't actually say anything offensive, her expression was sulky, insolent, and hostile.
26. But if Nelson Lord was right-no wonder they were sulky, staying away from home as much as they could.
27. The big bird squatted quietly against Rima's chest, but her eyes held a sulky, defiant glare.
28. In church they kept to their own groups, but here they jostled shoulder to shoulder, watchful and sulky.
29. As usual when things weren't going her way, Mary turned quite sulky.
30. Others, the majority, did not like Prince Andrey, and regarded him as a sulky , cold, and disagreeable person.