It was presumptuous of the boy to simply show up at the party without an invitation.
The presumptuous squire had borrowed his mentor's suit of armor for the tournament.
She struck him as rather presumptuous, expecting everyone to wait for her.It was presumptuous of her to join us for dinner uninvited.The woman found it presumptuous to have a stranger use her first name.
"How presumptuous you are!" "How I do things is my business!" "How shocking!"
It may be presumptuous to insist that your ideas are superior to those of experts, but it is sometimes correct. The governor found it presumptuous that the mayor addressed him by his first name.
Yes, presumptuous is an adjective, and can therefor be used in all tenses. Eg. "It was presumptuous of him."
To be presumptuous is to assume something is acceptable when it is actually rude. An example of a sentence with the word presumptuous is: I found it presumptuous of her to mention that she thought I needed to change my eating habits, because it is really none of her business what I eat.
It may be presumptuous to insist that your ideas are superior to those of experts, but it is sometimes correct. The governor found it presumptuous that the mayor addressed him by his first name.
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not really because it's presumptuous.
The professor was presumptuous as to believe that one of his students stole his i-pod, when really, he had misplaced it in his desk during his lunch break.
It was presumptuous of her to join us for dinner uninvited. His predecessors had all retired as very wealthy men. I was beset by problems in every department after the holiday was over.
You can use the word Truss in a sentence like this.
Can you use the word concluding in a sentence? Done.