How to Use crybaby in a Sentence
crybaby
noun-
Candy Crush and a crybaby: sounds like the perfect pair.
— Natalie Angier, New York Times, 4 Sep. 2017 -
Speaking of crybabies: Charles Barkley was once asked to name his favorite white wine.
— Scott Ostler, San Francisco Chronicle, 27 Jan. 2018 -
Are any of these crybabies going to pull out his, her, or their checkbooks to support the Whitney?
— Brian T. Allen, National Review, 4 Jan. 2020 -
Odysseus is a sissy, a crybaby, Jay informs the class, who are hooting with laughter.
— Peter Lewis, The Christian Science Monitor, 20 Sep. 2017 -
Super-deep repertoire of falls and flails, plus a classic crybaby Flop Face.
— Scott Ostler, SFChronicle.com, 18 Dec. 2019 -
The multi-million-dollar crybabies of the NFL need to take a lesson from these young Americans.
— Seattle Times Staff, The Seattle Times, 1 Sep. 2017 -
Who knew that Weinstein, so feared for so many years, was such an insecure crybaby?
— Frank Scheck, The Hollywood Reporter, 2 Mar. 2018 -
Ermengarde, the school dunce, Lottie, the school crybaby, and Becky, the scullery maid, quickly find a defender, surrogate mother, and friend in Sara.
— Sarah Schutte, National Review, 13 Mar. 2022 -
Now a few of these crybaby women have started to talk to reporters, and Bailey has decided his only way out is to kill himself.
— Joyce Wadler, New York Times, 6 Dec. 2017 -
Yes, there are new creatures including Sobble, described by the company as a crybaby. Get it: Sob-ble?
— Harold Goldberg, Washington Post, 18 June 2019 -
One is a petulant, frowny-faced, tantrum-throwing crybaby who has never been held accountable for anything.
— J.d. Crowe | Jdcrowe@al.com, al, 13 Dec. 2019 -
Trump has brought back respect for law enforcement, the military and the American flag despite the Hollywood crybabies and their ilk.
— Scott Kaufman, Orange County Register, 26 Apr. 2017 -
In a season in which referees against players has become a league-wide problem, the Warriors, noble champions of two of the past three seasons, have become what some would call crybabies.
— Scott Ostler, San Antonio Express-News, 13 Apr. 2018 -
In a season where referees vs. players has become a league-wide problem, the Warriors, noble champions of two of the past three seasons, have become what some would call crybabies.
— Scott Ostler, San Francisco Chronicle, 12 Apr. 2018 -
Christopher Cantwell, the crybaby who was seen sobbing on camera after finding out there was a warrant for his arrest, has been removed from both Facebook and Instagram.
— Breanna Edwards, The Root, 17 Aug. 2017 -
What kind of crybaby liberal suspends someone's free speech?
— Daniela Avila, Peoplemag, 5 Dec. 2022 -
What kind of crybaby liberal suspends someone’s free speech?
— Tomás Mier, Rolling Stone, 2 Dec. 2022 -
What kind of crybaby liberal suspends someone’s free speech?
— Glenn Rowley, Billboard, 2 Dec. 2022 -
The latest to make his appearance — excuse me, reappearance — in the crybaby ranks is former hedge fund manager Leon Cooperman, 78, whose net worth is pegged by Forbes at $2.5 billion.
— Michael Hiltzik, Los Angeles Times, 16 Nov. 2021 -
In this shadow story, Harding wasn’t a monster but a victim, an underdog unfairly vilified, and Kerrigan was a crybaby who made too much of her pain.
— Leslie Jamison, New York Times, 17 Jan. 2018 -
Often, detractors use both tactics against the same women – infantilizing them as princesses or crybabies, and also smearing them as craven or crazy (just ask Elizabeth Warren and Nancy Pelosi).
— Jill Filipovic, Cosmopolitan, 10 Oct. 2017 -
The ostensibly proper balance — confident and strong but not arrogant and aggressive, sensitive without being a crybaby — is subjective and murky.
— Teddy Wayne, New York Times, 28 Feb. 2020
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'crybaby.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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