Get Free Checker
[ US /ˈpaɪntˈsaɪz/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. well below average height

How To Use pint-size In A Sentence

  • The usual excuse is that readers of newspapers prefer their sentences short, their paragraphs pint-sized and text uncluttered with mysterious squiggles.
  • Before you can say Hutchinson-Gilford Progeria syndrome, our poor little unsuspecting tweeny is metamorphasizing into a pint-sized version of the aforementioned witch-hag, complete with misshapen moles and receding hairline. Demon Witch Child (1975)
  • The pint-sized heroes return for the final instalment of an entertaining trilogy and they face their biggest adventure yet.
  • So can the pint-size pal win over a sceptical motoring journalist? Times, Sunday Times
  • At age eight Tim was already a pint-sized entrepreneur.
  • The pint-sized popstrel found success at an Elvis impersonators contest at the White Rose Shopping Centre, Leeds.
  • The pint-sized singer is in good company. The Sun
  • Since the pint-sized Antipodean jumped the fence of Ramsay Street to conquer the world, many a soap starlet has been foolhardy enough to try and conquer the pop charts.
  • The television cartoon draws 535,000 pint-size viewers each week and is the top-rated show among children aged two to 11.
  • Compact and exuberant, U2 3D may be no more than a pint-sized concert film with a lustrous surface, but the lensing is so vibrant and the music so buoyant, even non-fans may find their eyes popping and their heads bobbing. GreenCine Daily: U2 @ Cannes.
View all