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Grimace grimos, gri masnoun 1. An ugly, twisted expression on a

person's face, typically expressing disgust, pain, or wry amusement, French, from Middle French, alteration of grimache, of Germanic origin; akin to Old


English grima mask
Using the dictionary entry, which sentence uses grimace correctly?



O A. When Mr. Turnbull returned her essay, Anna grimaced at the
disappointing grade
B. Stella grimaced when she discovered a twenty-dollar bill in her
jacket pocket
C. The grimace on Tina's face told her friends she had exciting news
to share
O D. Mike smiled at the cashier with a grimace in hopes that she would
give him extra French fries

User GtotheB
by
4.5k points

1 Answer

1 vote

Answer:

A. When Mr. Turnbull returned her essay, Anna grimaced at the

disappointing grade

Step-by-step explanation:

All of the other scenarios explain the opposite emotion; happiness. You would not be in disgust in finding a twenty-dollar bill in your pocket, neither would you be in pain while telling exciting news. However, if you were to get a bad grade, you would not be happy. You would likely fit under the definition of a grimace - "typically expressing disgust, pain, or wry amusement"

User Nerjuz
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5.1k points