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cattish

ADJECTIVE
  1. marked by or arising from malice
    a catty remark

How To Use cattish In A Sentence

  • He smiled at her cattishly.
  • He remembered her cattish grin as she replied; ‘Sandmen.’
  • The stylists cattishly murmured that this was going too far, even for California.
  • Yes, and she had to remember, too, a fair proportion of smaller, sometimes insignificant-looking men, some of them scaly with dirt, who looked at you with a cold, mud-like antagonism as they stepped cattishly past. The Plumed Serpent
  • That's one reason why I treated you so cattishly last night; because you were so maddeningly good to look upon. The Bells of San Juan
  • His eyes seemed to vary from their usual hazel to a cattish kind of amber.
  • A cattish gleam of satisfaction flared in Miss Billingham's eyes. A Lady of Expectations
  • Frank Rich being Frank Rich: viperous and cattish, with razor-sharp claws. The Volokh Conspiracy » Frank Rich, Clarence Thomas, and the Missouri Assistant Attorney General:
  • But the sexual weakness that makes woman depend on a man for a subsistence, produces a kind of cattish affection, which leads a wife to purr about her husband as she would about any man who fed and caressed her. 71 Chap. XII
  • If I come across as “cattish” or “close-minded”, it must be because I’m not very good at S&M. City Wants to Regulate Sex Businesses at cvillenews.com
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