I was down in the mouth, feeling as though I had nothing going on in my life. |
|
When Rena visited me the other night, she was down in the mouth about something. |
|
It is no wonder that the Government is a little down in the mouth this week. |
|
She seems to accept it though and isn't getting too down in the mouth about it. |
|
Consequently, high street spending is likely to stay challenging as long as consumers remain down in the mouth. |
|
If you were down in the mouth over something, he'd come and snuggle up to you and give you a kiss. |
|
Later on I learned that Steiger almost always was down in the mouth and, if he was in a good mood, had a wistful look about him. |
|
It seems that City stockbrokers are a little down in the mouth. |
|
Yet he still managed to find something to be down in the mouth about. |
|
This took liberals by surprise and had a lot of them rather down in the mouth last Wednesday. |
|
The crowd is an inscrutable one: uptown, downtown, out of town, down in the mouth and mouths that won't quit. |
|
Flat, drop-shaped symmetrical teats respect the natural development of your baby's palate, teeth and gums, even if the soother ends upside down in the mouth. |
|
Photograph: Tristram Kenton Mark Rylance sounded surprisingly down in the mouth in his interview in Saturday's Guardian about his decade in charge of Shakespeare's Globe. |
|
His trademark is a deadpan expression and, in his younger days, Jack Dee had plenty to be down in the mouth about. |
|
I thought you looked a bit down in the mouth! |
|
It's a fact that will forever leave me down in the mouth. |
|