moodiness

  • 111coxic\ shock — The male counterpart to the female condition of toxic shock. Unbeknownst to his wife, Charlie, Charles was suffering from coxic shock. His symptoms were at first undetected moodiness, angst but with a closer look he was showing signs of his… …

    Dictionary of american slang

  • 112sklunklish — general moodiness; dyspepsia of the spirit; non specific disgust or aggravated boredom. Originally heard in the film The Bachelor and the Bobby Soxer, uttered by Shirley Temple apparently hepslang in upper middle class high schools in the late… …

    Dictionary of american slang

  • 113coxic\ shock — The male counterpart to the female condition of toxic shock. Unbeknownst to his wife, Charlie, Charles was suffering from coxic shock. His symptoms were at first undetected moodiness, angst but with a closer look he was showing signs of his… …

    Dictionary of american slang

  • 114sklunklish — general moodiness; dyspepsia of the spirit; non specific disgust or aggravated boredom. Originally heard in the film The Bachelor and the Bobby Soxer, uttered by Shirley Temple apparently hepslang in upper middle class high schools in the late… …

    Dictionary of american slang

  • 115moody — adjective (moodier, moodiest) 1》 given to unpredictable changes of mood, especially sudden bouts of sullenness. 2》 giving a poignant or mysterious impression. Derivatives moodily adverb moodiness noun …

    English new terms dictionary

  • 116crabbedness — n. 1. Sourness, roughness, tartness, acridity, acridness. 2. Asperity, acerbity, moroseness, sullenness, moodiness, churlishness, harshness, ill temper, acrimoniousness. 3. Difficulty, perplexity, intractability …

    New dictionary of synonyms

  • 117moroseness — n. Crabbedness, sullenness, moodiness, churlishness, sourness, sulkiness, sulks, spleen, ill temper …

    New dictionary of synonyms

  • 118sullenness — n. 1. Moroseness, moodiness, sourness, churlishness, spleen, sulkiness, ill temper, bad blood. 2. Gloominess, sombreness, dismalness. 3. Sluggishness, slowness, heaviness. 4. Obstinacy, intractableness, stubbornness, intractability. 5. Malignity …

    New dictionary of synonyms

  • 119moody — adjective moodier, moodiest 1 easily becoming annoyed or unhappy when there is no good reason to feel that way: She had been moody and difficult all day. | They kept apart in moody silence. 2 having moods that change often and quickly: a moody… …

    Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • 120put — verb past tense putpresent participle putting MOVE STH 1 (transitive always + adv/prep) to move something from one place or position into another, especially using your hands: put sth in/on/there etc: Put those bags on the table. | You should put …

    Longman dictionary of contemporary English