Scolded
in sentence
49 examples of Scolded in a sentence
He
scolded
me out, and said, "This is why we're here.
I can't tell you how many times I've been
scolded
in the park for letting my kids play on the ground.
Additionally, I've heard horror stories from people whose teachers
scolded
them, of course, for doodling in classrooms.
If any of the more rowdier children questioned the authority of the parents, they were
scolded.
Has anyone ever told you, "Stand up straight!" or
scolded
you for slouching at a family dinner?
She got
scolded
for degrading her own country's produced TV shows.
Guard B had more of a free mind than Guard A, and she often got
scolded
by Guard A whenever she expressed herself.
So he goes to the bank to open an account and meets the gorgeous Shea Stanley were her parents mets fans? he finds out he needs 200 to open a account meanwhile quigley gives his million to his banker friend and finds out the bills are marked so he will send a lackey named juice to get the unmarked ones when Preston leaves his bike gets run over by quigley he's about to write a check when he spots the cops and bolts back home his parents
scolded
him about his busted up bike and gets grounded what?
I've been
scolded
and scorned by fellow Christians for stating my disappointment with this movie.
It's as if, after years of these young men and women being
scolded
not to overact and "be natural", that now they do nothing at all, besides "mood act", which is an instant cure for insomnia.
The remaining interest in this film lies in the historical/cultural themes: The war (referenced only in regard to minor plot points - the characters seem scarcely affected except that they're
scolded
for leaving their lights on after curfew), and the role of astrology in American society (it seems to be have been perceived as a way for idle, reasonably well-off women to be parted from their money).
In Brussels the other day, Premier Wen Jiabao
scolded
European leaders for pressing for the renminbi’s revaluation.
So the world should take note when they do not – such as when US Under Secretary of State Wendy Sherman, at a recent conference in Washington, DC, on Asian security, publicly
scolded
South Korea for its seemingly endless vilification of Japan.
The results showed very clearly that a dog’s “guilty looks” came about solely because it was being scolded: the look had nothing to do with whether the dog had really committed an offense.
Instead, two senior North Korean officials subsequently visited Beijing and were
scolded
for the North’s behavior.
“Isn’t she wonderful,” he is reported to have said to an aide, one hand over the telephone, as she
scolded
him from London for some US policy error.
“No leader likes to be
scolded
publicly,” he said.
This dwarfs China’s surplus at its mercantilist peak of the mid-2000’s, when the G-7 (including Germany) regularly
scolded
the Chinese for fueling global imbalances.
Like a frustrated child being
scolded
by an overweening schoolmaster, many Britons decided that they would show them.
US Vice President Mike Pence made this all too clear at the Munich Security Conference in February, where he
scolded
Europeans for undermining US sanctions against Iran, and rather resembled a teacher reciting a list of overdue assignments.
In February, the US Senate Committee on Finance
scolded
industry representatives for pursuing policies that are “morally repugnant.”
At the sound of the door the children turned their heads; but seeing that their mother brought nothing back, they looked down on the ground again, repressing the longing to cry, for fear of being
scolded.
A serviette lay about, the servant should be
scolded.
As usual, he scolded, knocked up by work.
After she had well
scolded
her servant she gave her presents or sent her out to see neighbours, just as she sometimes threw beggars all the silver in her purse, although she was by no means tender-hearted or easily accessible to the feelings of others, like most country-bred people, who always retain in their souls something of the horny hardness of the paternal hands.
He was well
scolded.
A minute later she
scolded
herself; she felt that she had not been quickly enough offended.
Love for Madame de Renal became more and more impossible in the proud heart of Julien: as for her, she respected, she admired him; she had been
scolded
by him.
'You must not, on any account,' Madame Derville told her when she saw Julien return, 'feeling as you do, sit in the garden this evening, the damp air would make you worse.'Madame Derville was surprised to see that her friend, who was always being
scolded
by M. de Renal for the undue simplicity of her attire, had put on open-work stockings and a pair of charming little shoes that had arrived from Paris.
She had so
scolded
Julien for the imprudence he had shown in coming to her room the night before, that she trembled lest he might not come that night.
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