Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
"She was a big grump and told me to mind my own business."
I've been a royal grump since we had that fight.
"I've been kind of a grump the last few days.
If there's a grump anywhere between himself and the horizon, he seems to know it.
I've been a grump ever since you've known me.
What's more, I was a grump long before that.
"I suppose they could call him the world's champion grump," said Bob.
How would it be possible to head off a calamitous grump if this continued?
I looked back to where the old deaf grump still leaned on the gate.
I can't be an old grump all the time.
He hobbled over and sat down beside Grump on the bench.
"You can hardly walk into a room full of gingerbread houses and still be a grump."
But then again, I am just a grump.
The subsurface grump arises when he turns to some of our public figures.
She wouldn't be obliged to deal with the growling grump after all.
One situation makes me feel like a geezer, the other like a grump.
"He only speaks when he's interested, even if only to grump."
Or be a grump and use the wi-fi (every table has a power point).
Gary was a real grump when he first arrived here, but he is now coming out of his shell.
He's an awful grump until he's had his first eight cups of coffee."
LAST year seems to have wound down in a grump, at least among some readers.
You inevitably end up playing the role of the local grump, trying to talk your glassy-eyed guest down from the chandelier.
The second time I voted with grump.
I could have kissed the old grump.
Mrs. Grump, a chunky woman in her fifties, came marching forward.