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"grumpily" Definitions
  1. in a way that shows you are annoyed or in a bad mood

58 Sentences With "grumpily"

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

I do some light stretches and grumpily get ready for work.
Grumpily, I grabbed my jeans off the floor and donned Jessica's signature outfit.
"I'm more moderate than Trump," Mr. Berlusconi said grumpily, according to Mr. Friedman.
The bird was cut loose and seemed to "grumpily fly off," according to SFGate.
Born in Manhattan, Mr. Johnson has retained dual nationality and grumpily has paid American taxes.
He plays jokes on friends, often grumpily acting confused — before flashing a knowing and mischievous smile.
And when the Franco-German couple agree, others tend to fall into line, even if grumpily.
For example, golfers seemed less prone to grumpily bemoan their poor shots, cruel bogeys and heartless bounces.
Exxon is grumpily conceding absolutely as little as possible to climate hawks, for as long as possible.
Dukakis, however, hated discussing crime in this way and, laid low by flu, grumpily did his own thing.
Gail Kursel, Milwaukee My Sunday morning begins with the Talk page, so I grumpily saw it missing from the magazine.
When Doc arrives to retrieve his son's body, Sal comments grumpily on the new policy prohibiting photographs of the flag-draped coffins.
Now you have two beers or glasses of wine and stomp grumpily into the office the next day with a nasty headache.
The Maricopa County sheriff, Joe Arpaio, my old friend from Arizona, grumpily took the stage and gave an angry endorsement of Trump.
I Google ways to get rid of it and grumpily tell my boyfriend we need to go to Bartell to pick up hydrogen peroxide.
Be prepared to spend a ton of effort on a meal you think is good and watch the other person grumpily make a sandwich.
If you like your crime shows bleak, British and full of David Tennant snapping grumpily at people, then you need to start watching Broadchurch.
The Philips wake-up light is an alarm clock that gradually brightens to simulate the sunrise, meaning you wake up more naturally and less grumpily.
He's competent and intermittently pretty good, but he's still OJ Mayo, the guy with a nondescript beard and the grumpily vacant look in his eyes.
This requires the unanimous agreement of EU leaders, who will grumpily ask the prime minister what she wants the extension for and how long it should be.
I grumpily informed him it was the kind of music I might listen to while doing something else, like reading, or cleaning, or listening to better music.
Old baseball heads grumpily admitted that walks were probably better than sacrifice bunts and that the number of wins shouldn't be the main criterion for a starting pitcher.
On Sunday morning, the streets around Prospect Park were sprinkled with locals grumpily digging out their cars, as well as families who audibly argued over petty sledding disagreements.
The American Library Association has denounced this model using strong language, but perhaps it's time for libraries to do more than grumpily go along with whatever gets foisted upon us.
Watch the video above to see avatars of Ben Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, and James Madison grumpily argue over the issues that motivate millennial voters — in matching brocade vests and natty ponytails, of course.
On Inauguration Day in 2017, George W. Bush became the surrogate for many displeased Americans willing to push aside his former travesties, because he suddenly seemed so relatable, grumpily sitting in the cold rain.
In spite of widespread excitement around the reveal, a vocal cross section of Overwatch's community — much like (/eyeroll) any online gaming community — remains grumpily averse to not-straight-white-dudes all up in their game.
IFA phone launches always seemed a bit forced anyway — as if the manufacturers don't really like the late August/early September time slot and have to grumpily adjust their schedule to make those launches happen on time.
A figure of infinite threat in Ms. Russell's story — you're reminded of Judge Holden from Mr. McCarthy's novel "Blood Meridian" — he is, as played by Andrew Harris in the opera, a grumpily stentorian, all-too-real presence.
On August 13th Virgin Atlantic grumpily published data showing that Heathrow hit its target for processing more than 95% of non-EEA passengers within 45 minutes on only one day in July, with some waiting up to 156 minutes.
Of course you can tell by the title, this latest song is applicable to you, or me, or that person sitting opposite you grumpily typing too hard and flipping anxiously between browsers just trying to keep abreast of it all.
The lavenders of twilight are passing into the deep blues of a summer evening as Sir Hugo Latymer, a distinguished older novelist, grumpily prepares to meet, after many years, Carlotta Gray, a semi-celebrated actress who had been his mistress long ago.
An early winter storm dumped snow across much of the Northeast this week, forcing everyone to prematurely unearth hats and gloves and those weird fleece tubes you put on your face from the depths of their closets and grumpily trudge out into the cold.
That would be Prince Philip, also known as the Duke of Edinburgh, the gaffe-prone but grumpily endearing and loyal husband of Queen Elizabeth II for almost 70 years — the longest royal union in British history — who has served the country for nearly as long.
The Swansea, Massachusetts, police department grumpily ponied up $750 to get back one of its computers in November 2013; the virus "is so complicated and successful that you have to buy these bitcoins, which we had never heard of," Swansea police lieutenant Gregory Ryan told his local newspaper.
As she traverses mountains, cities, suburban towns and never-ending rural roads — beautifully depicted scenes that show the breadth of America — she's supported in her quest by family members like Grandpa Ed, who follows her in his trailer and cooks her eggplant parmigiana and grumpily feeds her soul.
He's posing for photos but when the next guy in line steps forward, the Wookiee rips off his head and grumpily declares, "Not now mate, I'm on my break," before ducking into an elevator with his head under his arm and disappearing -- presumably to get as far, far away from the crowds as possible.
As people who had been pepper-sprayed, beaten, or Tased cried for help and begged the police to stop the violence, the officer grumpily motioned to the crowd to move on to anywhere but in front of police HQ. By the end of the day 14 people had been injured in the fighting in Charlottesville.
E.P.A. (In his dissent, Scalia grumpily wondered why the agency couldn't just say that climate-change science was unsettled, and leave it at that.) The Trump Administration has already proposed defunding the E.P.A. by thirty-one per cent and cutting its staff by twenty per cent, raising questions about how it can fulfill its most basic responsibilities.
As I stepped outside onto the White House lawn (where the president's dog, Barney, grumpily ambled, and where men and women of the TV media stood squarely before the cameras, their faux-baritones booming and their faces lacquered with makeup), the sensation was akin to being regurgitated from a frothing slipstream and into a plodding river.
"Love and War and Snow" (season 1, episode 8) This is one of those very early episodes where we can see the show really figuring out its formula: The town will have some aggressively, endearingly twee event — in this case, keeping vigil in the snow to reenact a Revolutionary War battle that almost happened — and Luke will grumpily tend to everyone's welfare while Rory and Lorelai deal with mild romantic drama and interference from Emily and Richard.
Though the Post considered itself politically independent, it historically tended to support progressive politicians relative to the Times-Star and Enquirer. The Post's editorial position became uniformly conservative in the years following its merger with the Times-Star, according to Stevens (1969). By the early 1990s, the paper's political stance had become "a grumpily conservative sigh of resentment" according to journalist William Greider.
Pinkie begins to explain, but ends up smacking him repeatedly with the plank of wood before skipping away. Porky then grumpily lies on his side as Pinkie skips his way into the zoo, past a sleeping crocodile/alligator. Petunia begins to shout and tells Porky of Pinkie's location in the zoo. Soon Porky finds Pinkie sleeping with a big cat and its babies.
Mortimer starts to make fun of his short rival, making Mickey jealous. He takes two of his buttons from his shorts off. One button is hidden in Mickey's hand whilst the other button is thrown away. Mickey grumpily tries to grab Mortimer's buttons from his long trousers, but they electrocute him (revealed to be connected to batteries) making him even more jealous.
After their night out, Bob and Michelle start arguing again, this time in front of Rita and Sue who desperately try not to laugh. Michelle takes her anger out on them and tells them to stop laughing. She then storms off to bed. Grumpily, Rita and Sue make their own way home, unhappy that Bob can't take them in his car and have sex with them again.
Still, muses Lady Brute, in one of many discussions with her niece Bellinda, "These are good times. A woman may have a gallant and a separate maintenance too." Bellinda is at the same time being grumpily courted by Constant's friend Heartfree, who is surprised and dismayed to find himself in love with her. The bad example of the Brutes is a constant warning to Heartfree to not marry.
He goes on to discuss infections by similar diseases, the similarity of non-contagious diseases compared with monkeys, the liking of monkeys for tea, coffee and alcohol. He draws a wonderful word picture of baboons grumpily holding their aching heads the day after a drinking session (p7). He was aware that closely related animals always seemed to suffer from closely related parasites. He follows Huxley in his account of man's embryonic development, and then considers the evidence of vestigial organs, which he (and Huxley) called rudiments (p11).
He mentions grumpily that Haye and his guests have been laughing uproariously and stomping their feet on the floor. When the couple finally enters Haye's flat, they find the host stabbed to death, and his three guests—including Miss Blystone's surgeon father—unconscious due to atropine poisoning. The couple make their way back to the importing company, where the clerk offers them the telephone and promptly disappears. Upon their recovering consciousness, each of the three guests is questioned about the unusual contents of their pockets.
"My Delirium" received several positive reviews from critics. Nisha Diu of The Sunday Telegraph described "My Delirium" as "...a moody, energetic anthem underscored by insistent drums and a soulful vocal..." Popjustice described the song as "brilliant", and Digital Spy entertainment reporter David Balls labelled the song as a "glorious slice of indie-electronica". In its review, AllMusic said the song "echoes the power pop of The Bangles and The Go-Go's". Frazier McAlpine, on a BBC blog, described "My Delirium" as "a good pop song ... grumpily delivered", and called Ladyhawke's voice "sulky".
He grumpily disapproves of his own presents (apart from a bottle of brandy from Fred), but a jollier, more festive side of him also starts to show as he sings carols in the shower and calls his Christmas dinner "Lovely grub!" Exhausted after his travels, he retires to bed, though not before giving his cat and dog their own presents and wishing the reader "Happy Blooming Christmas!" Coward, McCann & Geoghan published the US edition of Father Christmas in October (). Kirkus Reviews gave the book a starred review, signifying remarkable merit.
Inspector Montalbano has a dream in between the tragic and the ridiculous, which reveals his recurring thoughts about death and his relationship with Livia. In the dream, he's witnessing his own funeral, Catarella himself tells him that he's dead. Attending the funeral are the usual police investigators: Coroner Dr. Pasquano, who grumpily refuses to give details on the deceased before the autopsy, QuestorThe Italian senior post of "Questor" is similar to a regional Commissioner or Chief of Police. Bonetti- Alderighi, who does not authorize Montalbano to investigate his own death, and his friend Mimì Augello.
Upon being discovered at age three, he instantly became a key member of the Our Gang children's comedy movie series and one of Hollywood's stars. His earliest films show him as an outspoken toddler, grumpily going along with the rest of the gang. His scene-stealing abilities brought him more attention, and by 1935 he was the de facto leader of the gang, often paired with Carl "Alfalfa" Switzer, and always the enterprising "idea man". Switzer's character became as much of a scene-stealer as the young McFarland was, and the two boys' fathers fought constantly over screen time and star billing for their children.
The results can often recall Seventies Eno at his most meditative and Village Green-era Ray Davies at his most world-sick more than Gorillaz's bounce or Blur's guitar buzz." Chris Schulz of The New Zealand Herald, was a little more critical of the album, writing: "'The hours pass by, just left on repeat,' he mourns on the shuffling broodiness of 'Hostiles'. 'I had a dream you were leaving ... when every atom in the universe is passing through our lives,' he mumbles grumpily on 'The Selfish Giant'. And he saves his biggest mopes for The History of a Cheating Heart, when he complains: 'I carry this on my back.
Although technical at times, the programme was light in tone, and much of its entertainment stems from the dynamic of personality clashes between the wine connoisseur, Clarke, and the more pragmatic May whom Clarke at one point described as "an utter scruff". (This was in contrast to May's position as "the gentleman" of the three presenters on Top Gear.) May acts the part of a difficult student and often behaved rude and grumpily, more interested in drinking wine than in talking about it. When he determined that Clarke rambled on pompously, he blew on a whistle, which he called the "Ozillator." At the start of the series, May declared he likes to drink wine, but knows little about it.
This collection of essays, first published shortly after Americans landed on the moon, explores inner and outer space, the vastness of the cosmos, and the limits of what can be known. Bringing poetic insight to scientific discipline, Eiseley makes connections between civilizations past and present, multiple universes, humankind, and nature. > Eiseley took the occasion of the lunar landing to consider how far humans > had to go in understanding their own small corner of the universe, their > home planet, much less what he called the 'cosmic prison' of space. Likening > humans to the microscopic phagocytes that dwell within our bodies, he > grumpily remarks, 'We know only a little more extended reality than the > hypothetical creature below us.
VHS recording created for NW Production Services, Inc., labelled as follows: NERO WOLFE II: EPS206B "HELP WANTED, MALE" A&E; Version Duration: 50:20:22 Mins 16:9 Letterbox Downconvert of HD Master The episode is faithful to the story except for a major change at the end. Instead of Inspector Cramer and Sergeant Stebbins leading Thomas Root away and Wolfe asking Emil Jensen to make a donation to the National War Fund instead of paying him, Stebbins escorts Root out while Cramer stays behind in Wolfe's office. When Jensen is about to offer Wolfe payment for finding his father's killer, Cramer grumpily informs Jensen that Wolfe had refused to provide his father with protection after he came to him for help, prompting Jensen to close his checkbook and leave with Jane Geer.
During interrogation the brother of the king, Lord High Admiral James, the Duke of York, inquired about a bullet hole in the top of Cornelis's hat, asking the captain to excuse the English for having damaged his clothing. Cornelis grumpily answered that he was proud of the hole; only he would have preferred it to have been a bit lower, to now being a prisoner. John Evelyn recounts how Cornelis was on 24 April 1665 released for his wit by Charles II of England in person: Cornelis having been admitted into the royal bedchamber, His Majesty gave him his hand to kiss, and restored him his liberty; asked many questions concerning the fight (it being the first blood drawn), his Majesty remembering the many civilities he had formerly received from his relations abroad — this was a reference to the support the Evertsen family had given Charles during his exile. Evelyn was then commanded to go with him to the Holland Ambassador, where he was to stay for his passport, and I was to give him 50 pieces in broad gold.
Teri hopes to be an ecospector (eco- prospector) like her father Telemachus, living on the surface in a pressure suit most of the time; but because in the last generation the colonists decided to forgo terraforming Mars to suit human life and instead adapt humans to suit the Martian environment, the future of ecospecting doesn't look good to Telemachus; he thinks the future of Mars is with the "Nations" of Mars- formed humans. It's estimated that modifying people can be done in just two to three generations, whereas terraforming Mars might take thousands of years. Thus he wants her to get an advanced degree and go into some always-needed occupation like science or medicine. When they strike a "scorehole", a very large deposit of methane and water, their fortune seems assured, and Teri expects to marry the boy she has been courting; when it turns out he has married someone else, she grumpily agrees to one more year of school at least, and she and Telemachus take on the job of shepherding a group of younger children to the school at Red Sands City.

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