If I mention getting someone in to do these jobs he gets all sulky and hurt, so it's not worth it.
She always gets sulky when she doesn't get her way.
There's no need to be sulky, it was a joke.
Face your problems intrepidly and stop sulking at home! *sulking is the verb form of sulk
pet
The petuant child favoured us with his sad and sulky look.
Yes. The verb is "to sulk", and the adjective is sulky, referring to a person who is moody and upset about something. But used very differently, the word can also be a noun-- a sulky refers to a horse-drawn carriage which is driven by one person.
Yes, Tepig is sulky.
The anagram is the rarely-used adverb "sulkily" (in a sulky or depressed manner).
There are two unscrambles:Mopiest (to be gloomy, brood or sulky)Optimes (plural of optime)
Sulky Gowers died in March 1970, in London, England, UK.
The word sulkily is the adverb form for the adjective sulky.The noun form of the adjective sulky is sulkiness.
pet·u·lant[ péchələnt ]sulky: ill-tempered or sulky in a peevish mannerSynonyms: sulky, crabby, peevish, grumpy, sullen, moody, cantankerous, huffy, snappish, irritable, grouchy, ill-tempered, touchy, testy, querulous, snappy, bad-tempered
Leo Sulky was born on December 6, 1874, in Cincinnati, Ohio, USA.
A sulky is always used in harness racing. It is the cart where the jockey sits.