Pat is so meddlesome, bothering me when I'm doing my science project.
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"Argh! What meddlesome teenagers those people from Scooby Doo were!"
Honestly, it is just an adjective and can go before any noun.
"What a meddlesome lamp post! He's making shenanigans of my darkness!"
I believe you mean meddlesome, as middlesome isn't a word. If someone is meddlesome it means someone who is constantly interfering (or meddling).
interfering, invasive, meddlesome, meddling, nosy*, presumptuous, protruding, prying
use ize in sentence
You would use 'me' in this case. You use 'I' when you are the subject of the sentence, and 'me' when you are the object of the sentence or the phrase, as in this case.Subject of sentence: I was going to get a picture.Object of phrase: I was going to get a picture of Kaeleah and me.Object of sentence: It was Kaeleah andme in the picture.
Sure, I can use "so" at the beginning of a sentence.
he was very meddlesome
those meddlesome kids
Meddlesome usually refers to a person who likes to meddle, or interfere, in the business of others. For instance, "She was a very meddlesome person who always gossiped about others. "
I was told by a meddlesome acquaintance that my two brothers had a fight.
My boss is a meddlesome nuisance.
"I would have gotten away with it if it weren't for you meddlesome kids!"
A meddlesome cat is a cat without a tail.
I believe you mean meddlesome, as middlesome isn't a word. If someone is meddlesome it means someone who is constantly interfering (or meddling).
Meddlesome Mike - 1914 is rated/received certificates of: UK:U
interfering, invasive, meddlesome, meddling, nosy*, presumptuous, protruding, prying
Troublesome
"Yenta" - A person, especially a woman, who is meddlesome or gossipy.