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View definitions for down in the mouth

down in the mouth

adjective as in feeling dejected or sad

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Example Sentences

She was very down in the mouth at the thought of losing Camilla to London, England.

He said he finds that population “kind of down in the mouth as a way that’s unique to New Orleans.”

"No, it's not down in the mouth. It's reality," Lemon exclaimed.

And I think Merton essentially was too humorous and too complete a man to have been down in the mouth about his sins all the time.

House for the Democrats, others seemed down in the mouth that the Dems didn’t wrest Senate control away from the GOP.

From Salon

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From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.

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