pouting in English

verb
1
push one's lips or one's bottom lip forward as an expression of petulant annoyance or in order to make oneself look sexually attractive.
she lounged on the steps, pouting
synonyms:look petulantpull a facelook sulky
verb

Use "pouting" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "pouting" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "pouting", or refer to the context using the word "pouting" in the English Dictionary.

1. You're pouting.

2. Stop pouting!

3. The Pouting Prophet

4. Pouting and running away actually worked.

5. I don't know why you're pouting.

6. Is that why you're pouting, big baby boo?

7. So a lady's boudoir is really her pouting - room.

8. Bouderie definition: sulkiness, pouting Meaning, pronunciation, translations and examples

9. The floppy fringes and pouting lips of the respective lead singers are another story entirely.

10. Then she saw Nigel dancing with a well-rounded girl with yellow hair and pouting lips.

11. Pouting mockingly, he gives his considered reply, before creasing up with laughter as his answer is translated.

12. She wound a lime chiffon scarf of Madeleine's around her head, and practised pouting with one hip thrust forward.

13. As I came up out of the trough, the wave was pouting out a lip like the deck of an aircraft carrier.

14. Peggy’s son, mentioned at the outset, noticed his younger brother’s flushed face, pouting lips, and tearful eyes, and he recognized the pain his brother was experiencing.

15. Then your child will recognize that this is the case and will realize that neither pouting, arguing, nor acting as though he feels you are cruel and unloving, will be of any use.

16. You are typically Antsy when expecting something pleasurable and exciting to happen or just expecting something to happen in general, but you're sitting on your ass somewhere very uneasy, unable to sleep, unable to eat, unable to sit still pouting in your head that it still hasn't

17. “Coveting, pouting, or tearing others down does not elevate your standing, nor does demeaning someone else improve your self-image.” “Crouchers move through a garden at a stoop: naming, gasping, horraying, admiring or Coveting plants; Gapers saunter, smiling or sighing at what they find, succumbing to an intangible beatitude that takes them for a brief escape into another dimension.”