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"bossiness" Definitions
  1. bossy behaviour

44 Sentences With "bossiness"

How to use bossiness in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "bossiness" and check conjugation/comparative form for "bossiness". Mastering all the usages of "bossiness" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Inwardness is the essence of the book — and bossiness.
Chris' bossiness opens up a lifeline for Domenick and Wendell.
Hermione Granger suits her maturity; her bossiness becomes her exalted political position.
I think Cheryl did a lot to bring that up, of the bossiness and such.
Ever since the tribes swapped, he's been making little remarks to Mike about Natalie's bossiness.
Marshaling all the matter-of-fact bossiness of an Italian mama, she disarmed the vainglorious Mustafà.
With all the bossiness of a big sister, Kali tries to bridge the gap between them.
Money: As the bold ram of the zodiac, you're equal parts roasted and beloved for your bossiness.
Those who deal with unruly kids all day never quite lose that twang of exasperation mixed with bossiness.
Mr. Milland, who also directed the film, plays the paterfamilias with a dyspeptic bossiness appropriate to his dual capacity.
They're expected to show that they're as tough as men, but then that toughness is described as bossiness, shrillness.
Instead, the characters feel cut and pasted from some emoji file labelled "scowling brunette," then outfitted with lesbianism or bossiness.
Issa Rae plays Jordan's assistant, who has just discovered that while her boss is small, her bossiness still looms large.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson&aposs government is one of Brexiteer nationalists who easily bristle under the bossiness of other countries.
And you could walk from Cairo to Cape Town without meeting anyone who complains about the overweening bossiness of the African superstate.
Their dynamic is unmistakably a classic mother / adult-daughter pairing, with both women alternating protectiveness and exasperated I-know-what's-best-for-you bossiness.
I'm also bothered that if you're an assertive woman — and I'm called aggressive all the time simply because I'm assertive — it's misconstrued as bossiness.
"My husband is not at all intimidated by my drive, or my bossiness," Pompeo told PEOPLE during the Marie Claire Power Trip, a women's empowerment conference.
This season, though, I was struck by the revelation that her bossiness was a way of overcompensating for fears of rejection that dated back to childhood.
Wolf Weston's powerful alto, which contains shades of both Lizzo's playful bossiness and Macy Gray's raspy melancholy, shapes the group's debut, "First Bloom," released in November.
Quickly, I found that not only had Cadillac achieved both lightness and bossiness but also quite possibly redefined the way a full-size luxury sedan can behave.
Tully is like Mary Poppins without the bossiness, except that Mary seldom lounged in a hot tub with her employer, as Tully does with Marlo, sharing secrets and revelling in the manlessness of their bond.
" Early in her comeback, she took her pianist, Ross Patterson, to couples' therapy because, she said, "he was misunderstanding a certain attitude that was coming from me as maybe bossiness, humiliation or something like that.
"If I wanted a song, I would ask you for a song," she says with a flash of beastly bossiness just shocking enough to be advantageous to a 12-year-old girl in 1940s England.
In her novels it was inevitably mothers, grandmothers, aunts, sisters who kept families and communities together with that mesh of loving bossiness: pull up your socks, comb your head, do your chores, hush your mouth.
MacKenzie Bourg and Lauren Alaina, "I Hope You Dance" The season 10 runner-up has that "I'M GONNA GET WHAT I WANT!" type of bossiness that looks terrible on a 16-year-old but totally works on a legitimate adult firecracker.
RALPH tackles similar tropes pop music has employed since the inception of the genre (love, loss, bossiness, love again, and so on) but she positions them, as well as herself, in a way that ensures we hear their depth and, more importantly, make it very transparent who conceived it.
He achieved the unintrusive effect—and sombre tone—he wanted, but, in seeking to correct what he perhaps considered the bossiness of his previous novel, "Concluding" (1948), which used interior monologue and précis, he overlooked the innovations of his earlier works, which had found their own ways of avoiding authorial omniscience.
Because of this, they are extremely trainable. Their natural wariness, while valuable in a herding dog which might need to alert their shepherd of strange animals or people, combined with their herding bossiness, can lead to shyness or aggression in even the most friendly puppy if not properly managed. Frequent socialization from a very young age can help counter this trait.
Kate and Anne's strategy are that Kate looks back while Anne looks on forward. Lisa and Lauren go up to a narrow lane but do not know if it is the right choice. Lary has overcome Gary's bossiness by telling Gary that they need to get out of the area. Gary decides this advice isn't right and stays in the area.
Early in the series, Carla doesn't feel particularly close to Elliot Reid (Sarah Chalke) but they later become best friends. Series creator Bill Lawrence has said on DVD commentaries that this mirrored Reyes' and Chalke's real-life relationship. Though they are close, their relationship is not without friction; Carla sometimes resents Elliot's neurotic perfectionism and (unintended) condescension about her family background. Elliot in turn is often annoyed by Carla's bossiness.
But when Oliver discovers that Luna's agency is forcing Brucken to work for them, he gets angry at Luna for letting Brucken live in their house, while Oliver's father is still in jail. His relationship with Luna becomes strained, but he nonetheless keeps her secret. :Oliver soon becomes good friends with Heather, one of Elizabeth's lackeys. Heather warms up to Oliver's kindness, and becomes sick of Elizabeth's bossiness.
Bob is the office manager of Lotus, Spackman & Phelps, and is, aside from Stella, probably the most competent employee of the firm. A very dedicated worker, Bob tends toward bossiness and is a bit of a prude, which tends to grate on many of his co-workers. He fell in love with Sarah, a worker at the sandwich shop - 'Mr. Bappy' - which is located in the same building as the firm.
Mavis was not happy with the idea. In 1987, Percy formed the Percy Sugden Formation Dancers, containing local notables such as Hilda Ogden (Jean Alexander) and Phyllis Pearce (Jill Summers). He encouraged them to an enter a local dance contest - however, fed up with his bossiness, the dancers finally ousted Percy and elected a new chairman. Percy reacted by cancelling the group's entry in the dance contest, and informing them that new entries were no longer being accepted.
Tigger and the narrator tell Rabbit that he used to love Easter, but Rabbit does not believe them, so Tigger takes him back through the book to last year's Easter celebration. In the flashback, the gang prepares for Easter, painting eggs and making decorations. Rabbit wants everything to be as organized and orderly as possible, treating Easter as a professional occasion rather than a fun holiday. The others grow tired of Rabbit's bossiness and, under Tigger's suggestion, sneak off with the Easter eggs.
No Boys Allowed received mixed reviews from most music critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album received an average score of 54, based on 13 reviews, which indicates "mixed or average reviews". Allmusic writer Andy Kellman viewed the album as overproduced and commented that it "often falls flat". Ben Ratliff of The New York Times wrote that "Hilson gets a certain energy out of bossiness", but expressed a mixed response towards its production and viewed that the album lacks a "narrative".
Surprisingly tough and as bossy as Danny, Toots is the gang's second-in- command and takes charge in Danny's absence. Her bossiness is exemplified in the feature-length Queen Toots, where she discovers she is connected to royalty. When Toots takes advantage of her power, Dennis announces that she cannot boss him around and she puts him in a makeshift prison tower (quickly populated by other Beano characters and the rest of the kids). She loves music, often pulling a "boogie box" (a CD player) behind her or listening to her headphones instead of Teacher.
Homer and Marge proceed to get into an all night argument, to the point of Homer calling Marge's bed "a loveless slab of bossiness", and fearing that his parents could split up, Bart decides that he and Lisa should return the RV to the dealership for a full refund, and Lisa agrees. Discovering that the children and RV are gone, Homer and Marge give chase in the car. Bart and Lisa accidentally get on the freeway and force their parents to kiss before they will pull over. But after they kiss, Bart asks Homer to raise his allowance, which angers Homer, who in turn strangles Bart.
Descriptions of children are frequently highly pejorative and "demonizing". Examples given from lists of attachment disorder symptoms found on the internet include lying, avoiding eye contact except when lying, persistent nonsense questions or incessant chatter, fascination with fire, blood, gore and evil, food related issues (such as gorging or hoarding), cruelty to animals and lack of conscience. They also give an example from the Evergreen Consultants in Human Behavior which offers a 45-symptom checklist including bossiness, stealing, enuresis and language disorders. A commonly used diagnostic checklist in attachment therapy is the Randolph Attachment Disorder Questionnaire or "RADQ", which originated at the Institute for Attachment in Evergreen.
Andrew Lloyd Webber: His Life and Works – Walsh, Michael (1989, revised and expanded, 1997),P.85, Abrams: New York She also appeared in two Carry On films, Carry On Regardless in 1961 (playing Mata Hari) and Carry On Camping in 1969 (playing Terry Scott's wife, Harriet, with a braying laugh and jolly bossiness). Her other film roles included Ramsbottom Rides Again (1956), The Boys (1962), The Wild Affair (1964), The Leather Boys (1964), The Best House in London (1969), and Eyewitness (1970). She later played Hermione in the 1982 British film Britannia Hospital, Violet Manning in Peter Yates' 1983 film version of The Dresser, Princess Troubetskaya in the 1986 TV movie Anastasia: The Mystery of Anna, and Mrs.
The main opposition to a constitutional assembly was from Buenos Aires, yet not from the literate citizens and Unitarian businessmen, but from the Buenos Aires caudillo Juan Manuel de Rosas, who claimed it was too soon to seal a constitution. The assassination of Quiroga in Barranca Yaco put an end to the initiative of the caudillos of the interior. The Federal Pact stipulated the formation of a Representative Commission with the seat in the city of Santa Fe. Each of the subscribed provinces would send a delegate with certain powers of decision, such as of war and peace declarations, the selection of the heads of the battalions. Delegates would also add voice to the national subjects decided by the Federative Congress, such as the country's administration, internal and foreign bossiness, and the range of each province's independence.
Identified by Ayn Bernos of Thought Catalog as "the epitome of a ... control freak", Refinery29's Kelsey Miller summarized Monica's personality as funny, uptight, loving, and competitive. A very organized character with a signature Type A personality who enjoys being in charge, Monica is known for being a "neat freak" obsessed with cleanliness – especially when it comes to maintaining the impeccable condition of her apartment – neurotic, extremely obsessive-compulsive, and competitive in nature, personality traits that are exaggerated for humor and comic relief; the writers did not begin to take full comedic advantage of Monica's neuroses until the show's first Thanksgiving episode. The character is also the loudest of her friends. In her book Writing With Emotion, Tension, and Conflict: Techniques for Crafting an Expressive and Compelling Novel, author Cheryl St. John wrote that Monica exhibits qualities commonly associated with perfectionism and bossiness.
Angry at Peter's bossiness, Brian bites his arm, which leaves Peter afraid of him; the next day, Brian tries to reconcile with Peter, but Peter, still scared, only pelts him with furniture, dishes and Stewie, angering Brian who storms off in a rage. Brian, regretful of biting Peter, quits performing with Stewie and Sinatra, resorting to drinking wine from a gutter. However, Brian regains his confidence when Stewie finds him, where he tells Brian that there are things in life which are beyond his control, telling him that even though they aren't in his control, they do matter, contrary to Brian's common beliefs. Meanwhile, Meg prepares to tell Sarah that she is not a lesbian and that she only pretended to be in order to make friends; however, Sarah is in her underwear, believing Meg has come to her house to have sex with her.
Peppermint Patty frequently plays lovers' games with Charlie Brown, and gets frustrated or even angry when he does not take the bait; he does like Peppermint Patty, but only as a friend (though their friendship is occasionally strained by her strong personality and bossiness toward him). Originally, Peppermint Patty played reverse psychology; she would often say, "You kind of like me, don't you, Chuck?" when it was clear that it was Peppermint Patty who had the crush on Charlie Brown, while he not only did not have a crush on her, he also did not quite know what to make of her. His true love was the unattainable Little Red-Haired Girl, and having a girl actually like him was unexplored territory, although Peppermint Patty once angrily expressed her jealousy to Charlie Brown for his affection of that girl. Patty frequently denied having a crush on Charlie Brown at first, writing him off as too wishy-washy and because she "could strike him out on three straight pitches", and during a game of Ha-Ha Herman crudely insulting him when she thought he was not listening.

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