Bickered can be categorized as a verb.
Verb |
||
bicker - To quarrel in a tiresome, insulting manner. | ||
bicker - To move tremulously, quiver, shimmer. |
# | Sentence | ||
---|---|---|---|
1. | verb | Two of the school jazz band's superstars, both white, bickered over whose chops were the "blackest." | |
2. | verb | Tom and Mary bicker all day long. | |
3. | verb | Rather than focus on actual problems, they bicker among themselves, accusing each other of having beliefs that are insufficiently ideologically pure. | |
4. | verb | They began to bicker. | |
5. | verb | A stoup of wine (for in those days it was served out from the cask in pewter flagons) was placed on the table, and each had his quaigh or bicker before him. | |
6. | verb | The two siblings bicker without reason. | |
7. | verb | Tom and Mary bicker all day long. | |
8. | verb | Rather than focus on actual problems, they bicker among themselves, accusing each other of having beliefs that are insufficiently ideologically pure. | |
9. | verb | They began to bicker. | |
10. | verb | A stoup of wine (for in those days it was served out from the cask in pewter flagons) was placed on the table, and each had his quaigh or bicker before him. | |
11. | verb | The two siblings bicker without reason. |
Sentence | |
---|---|
verb | |
Two of the school jazz band's superstars, both white, bickered over whose chops were the "blackest." | |
Tom and Mary bicker all day long. | |
Rather than focus on actual problems, they bicker among themselves, accusing each other of having beliefs that are insufficiently ideologically pure. | |
They began to bicker. | |
A stoup of wine (for in those days it was served out from the cask in pewter flagons) was placed on the table, and each had his quaigh or bicker before him. | |
The two siblings bicker without reason. | |
Tom and Mary bicker all day long. | |
Rather than focus on actual problems, they bicker among themselves, accusing each other of having beliefs that are insufficiently ideologically pure. | |
They began to bicker. | |
A stoup of wine (for in those days it was served out from the cask in pewter flagons) was placed on the table, and each had his quaigh or bicker before him. | |
The two siblings bicker without reason. |