I was very angry, he sat on the ice to sulk.
Easily angered people don't always curse and throw things; sometimes they withdraw socially, sulk, or get physically ill.
One in three children in Britain today lives below the breadline, while bankers sulk if their annual bonus falls to a paltry million pounds.
They sulk and feel undervalued.
He went off to sulk in his room.
He did not sulk and grow discouraged and rebellious because "everything was against him."
Hearing that, the mother was in sulk. Such a rude saying will certainly earn the little girl a severe scold, I thought.
Jo was in a sulk upstairs.
The man likes sulk, and very unwilling to explain the angry reason to family members.
Ronaldo may sulk if things aren't going his way, Deco is on the verge of retirement, Nani is more of an impact player and Simao usually bottles under pressure.
In time you are indeed going to be OK. Don't sulk.
When Regina Mayer's parents dashed her hopes of getting a horse, the resourceful 15-year-old did not sit in her room and sulk.
She'd either sulk or raise a stink if she didn't get her own way.
The firm lips pouted in a sulk.
That Guoxing Festival, mother to work overtime and can not take me to play, to pursue this matter, I told my mother gave birth to sulk for several days.
If you have any complaint, don't just sulk; speak up.
Of course, the two people in addition to giving birth to a sulk, they were chased and scolded.
Just being contradicted can put him into a towering rage, but I've never known him to sulk or bear grudges.