Use "gossipy" in a sentence
gossipy example sentences
gossipy
1. Also, I had to be very discreet about… you know… because this was a gossipy small town and he couldn’t afford to let rumours start and…
2. The little tables with those colourful sun umbrellas, the happy visitors watching La Belle Province pass by, the waiters, fleet- footed and gossipy, serving coffees and creamy cakes, had all disappeared to await the coming of another summer
3. They got so excited when they heard about your revolt, and they’re such gossipy things, that they kept me pretty well informed
4. His fervor for the written word was an interweaving of solemn respect and gossipy irreverence
5. connection for them to add to their long gossipy chats to their less fortunate
6. The trust-eroding habit of the gossipy nosey neighbor has evolved into the usurping voyeuristic presumption of a right to virtual investigation and invasion of privacy, because of the surveillance culture that invites everyone to participate in the potentially lucrative hobby of scrap-face-booking, as websited on People Chronicling – a wiki-gathered Rogue's gallery of imagemation
7. serious, gossipy or funny – that is synergistic with the image you want
8. She did not capture the same notice as Rhea for she lacked her glamour but kept the gossipy club crowd"s tongues wagging
9. One day I looked at my chubby face in the mirror and told myself that in a little while I would be just another fat, sexually frustrated, empty headed, gossipy wife like the ones I saw at the club
10. from Angela in one of those idle, gossipy conversations we started having as our conjugal life took a more friendly and companionable turn
11. "I heard he did," Alicia said in a gossipy way
12. She wondered for a guilty moment if it was gossipy to mention it, but it was OK, because it was Celeste
13. midstream, calling out to the others, carrying on a gossipy conversation at a distance
14. A long course of reading historical works, light and gossipy in tone, carried out in garrets of Parisian hotels, sprawling on an untidy bed, to the neglect of his duties, menial or otherwise, had affected the manners of Pedro Montero
15. What is more, they seemed to come in just before the market opened, left promptly right after the market closed, and never even glanced at the Wall Street Journal, preferring instead to read the gossipy New York Post
16. But how seriously anyone would have taken it given its gossipy nature—and the fact that it’s not sourced at all—is questionable