naughtiness

[ UK /nˈɔːtɪnəs/ ]
NOUN
  1. an attribute of mischievous children
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How To Use naughtiness In A Sentence

  • And, overborne by his naughtiness, I purpose to break his ill-sounding arrows and his bow in his very sight. The Argonautica
  • Who knows what naughtiness he is cooking up behind that sensible, school-teacherly exterior? The Sun
  • I wanted to see the naughty spot on it," answered mamma, "I heard it call auntie a _name_ just now, and I wanted to tell you if I ever heard it call any one that again, I should put something on the spot to cure the naughtiness. The Youth's Companion Volume LII, Number 11, Thursday, March 13, 1879
  • Mr. Bear returns, discovers the naughtiness and punishes Edith by spanking her.
  • Rituals of transgression, sensationalist violation and titillating naughtiness became the stock-in-trade of popular news reporting in the late nineteenth century.
  • Hence, Ellis went back and reshot a number of scenes in March this year with a view to increasing the gore and naughtiness.
  • Besides, his thinking and writings on humor paid attention to the aesthetic value of humor, which includes farcicality , wittiness, naughtiness, irony and laugh.
  • There's a coffee stain on her dress and a sleepy naughtiness to her demeanour. Times, Sunday Times
  • There's a coffee stain on her dress and a sleepy naughtiness to her demeanour. Times, Sunday Times
  • I'm now filled with a sense of youthful naughtiness mixed with zest for life which I always get when I see evening through to sunrise.
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