Random good picture Not show
1. Why were grown-ups always so stuffy and slow to recognize good ideas?
2. If you're good you can eat with the grown-ups.
3. If you're frightened, tell one of the grown-ups.
4. The grown-ups will sit at one table and the children at another.
5. July Good month for the grown-ups.
6. Their unity made them seem like grown-ups.
7. Remarkably, both the kids and the grown-ups enjoyed themselves.
8. Once I had enjoyed this Gamberwick Green for grown-ups.
9. All the grown-ups clapped their hands.
10. Meanwhile the grown-ups are joining in ancient tea ceremonies, and taking part in Sumo wrestling.
11. Do grown-ups naturally help children learn in their everyday lives?
12. In trying to amuse children and grown-ups,(sentencedict.com) it contains scenes which will displease both.
13. Way too contrived and gooey for most grown-ups, it might well delight youngsters, especially its dramatic underwater sequences.
14. The grown-ups were already packing their cars in the hope of driving beyond the fog.
15. Grown-ups are so boring! All they ever do is talk!
16. All the grown-ups smiled in that boring way they have when little girls are being exceptionally sick-making.
17. That meant one apiece for the grown-ups and one left over.
18. They are always pretending to be grown-ups playing soldiers, playing shop.
19. Visiting an ELEK-TEK store is like going to a toy store for grown-ups.
20. They were thirteen or at the most fourteen years old, but to me they were very grand grown-ups.
21. As mom inhales, Tamika sleeps, her pink and white sundress absorbing the fluids of unknown grown-ups.
22. Not withstanding the propaganda of many generations of tight-assed hypocritical grown-ups: Hell no.
23. There followed a silence that Nicandra could neither interrupt nor question - they were the Grown-Ups.
24. Even at that early age, Celia sensed a strange unease, a tension amongst the grown-ups.http://sentencedict.com/grown-ups.html
25. You can distinguish the bodies of the girls from those of the grown-ups.
26. Smaller children open their presents, and older children and grown-ups spend the evening together.
27. There were complex power struggles of a desperate kind, for there were no grown-ups to appeal to.
28. But on Fridays and Saturdays they ate with the grown-ups and a story was told during the meal.
29. It was tacitly assumed that such activities were for grown-ups only.
30. For example, the child considers it wrong to lie to his parents and other grown-ups but not to his comrades.