He has a wry sense of humor, with little twists in it.
She gave a wry little smile, like a check mark on her face.
The bittersweet eulogy gave me a wry smile.
"WRY" is an adjective, which describes something Use it to describe something or someone that is unusual, contrary, distorted, devious, perverse, ironic, etc. Example: "His remark about my chances of winning the contest was wry and sarcastic."
You could write the sentence with the word torrent like this: I don't know how to use the word torrent in a sentence.
A sentence with the word 'grudgingly' in it could be 'i grudgingly shared my sweets with my brother'
A sentence with the word 'blew' could be 'I watched as the kite blew in the wind.'
The boy made a wry face after tasting the sour lemon
I have a penchant for wry humor.
The bittersweet eulogy gave me a wry smile.
irony
"She smiled wryly." "He paused as a wry smile flickered across his lips." I think that's right. I'm hardly an expert.
The homophone for rye is "wry".
Your question is itself a sentence which uses the word "could".
Wry is the answer I found for Expressing Irony.
wry is not a verb so it doesn't have a present tense. Wry is an adjective.
"WRY" is an adjective, which describes something Use it to describe something or someone that is unusual, contrary, distorted, devious, perverse, ironic, etc. Example: "His remark about my chances of winning the contest was wry and sarcastic."
Jool-wry Wry rhyming with "tree"
Gordon Wry was born in 1910.