All 9 Uses of
sulk
in
A Good Man is Hard to Find AND OTHER STORIES
- Over by the toolshed, about fifteen feet away, the two Negroes, Astor and Sulk, had stopped work to watch.†
Story 10.
- Sulk, the young Negro, was attaching the wagon to the cutter and Mr. Guizac was attaching the cutter to the tractor.†
Story 10.
- The week before, he had come upon Sulk at the dinner hour, sneaking with a croker sack into the pen where the young turkeys were.†
Story 10.
- In the afternoon she explained what was going to happen to them to Astor and Sulk who were in the cow lot, filling the manure spreader.†
Story 10.
- When Gobblehook first come here, you recollect how he shook their hands, like he didn't know the difference, like he might have been as black as them, but when it come to finding out Sulk was taking turkeys, he gone on and told her.†
Story 10.
- She watched as he came out of the barn and motioned to Sulk, who was coming around the back of the lot.†
Story 10.
- I can run it without you but not without them and if you mention this girl to Sulk again, you won't have a job with me.†
Story 10.
- Whyn't you go back to Africa?" he asked Sulk one morning as they were cleaning out the silo.†
Story 10. *
- That evening Mr. Shortley left without notice to look for a new position and the Negro, Sulk, was taken with a sudden desire to see more of the world and set off for the southern part of the state.†
Story 10.
Definition:
-
(sulk) to be overly unhappy and unsociable -- often due to disappointment or a sense of not getting what was deserved