we not have to grin every day like mental people
I've always tried to be ingratiating with your mother, but she is determined not to like me.If she didn't work so hard to be ingratiating, people might actually like her, or at the very least, respect her.
The Merriam-Webster dictionary defines "ingratiating" as "capable of winning favor." Sentences using this word include:He warmed up the audience with an ingratiatingsmileHer ingratiating manner put the newcomers at ease
His mischievous grin was enough to make anyone suspicious of his intentions.
She couldn't help but grin when she saw her surprise birthday party waiting for her.
His big grin told us that he liked the gift very much.
He couldn't help but grin from ear to ear when he saw his surprise birthday party.
The new neighbor's ingratiating ways of sending over homebaked goodies went unappreciated by the neighborhood scrooge.
The girls love his blue eyes, dimples and boyish grin.
I can deduce by that grin on your face and your hands behind your back that you have a gift for me.
No, "grins" is not the plural of "grin." "Grins" is the present tense form of the verb "grin." The plural of "grin" is "grins."
Will grin.
Unpleasantly and excessively suave or ingratiating in manner or speech.