Mark Twain said, 'All I say is kings is kings and you got to make allowances. Take them all around, they're a mighty ornery lot. It's the way they're raised'. Twain is a pseudonym. His real name was Samuel Langhorne Clemens [November 30, 1835-April 21, 1910].
This quote can be found on page 62 of "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" by Mark Twain. It is spoken by Jim, a character in the novel, during a conversation with Huck Finn about the nature of kings.
lkiguygujhg lkiguygujhg
irritable
The word "ornery" is an American dialectical variant of the ordinary word "ordinary", which goes back to Latin ordinarius, "orderly", from ordo, "order".
An example.... That ornery man had sassy atitude and a big mouth. (Ornery means to be sassy, stubborn, rude, or have to much to say)
Ornery.
I suspect you mean "ornery", not "awnery". A person who is ornery does not get along well with others, and may be short-tempered and prickly.
conceal
He was an ornery person.
hey! so its on pg 227 and on paragraph 3...."that Ornery old man....." kk hoped i helped u
That is true. To call someone ornery is a funny way of complaining about their hostile or difficult kind of behavior.
Student and ornery teenager.
You are probably looking for the word "ornery".
unsteady and dazed; dazed