Chummy in a sentence as an adjective

Here's my laundry list of feedback:- The lead text is too chummy.

At the same time, don't be "chummy" with the interviewer.

I read this when it came out as well and found it really odd in contrast to their chummy chat.

I see it also has a waste for the government to chummy up with these "celebs".

There's no way they want to risk their employees getting too chummy with the enemy.

The "cyber police" have been getting far too powerful and chummy with ISPs as of late.

I'm not convinced that Mozilla and Google are as chummy as this video suggests.

No amount of hiring chummy people with mediocre skills is going to make those projects succeed.

If you want to build up some sort of chummy relationship by using swear words, put it in your spoken text.

Yep why do you think Salmond and the NAT's are playing the race to the bottom with capital gains tax and is so chummy with Trup and Murdoch.

And in general we don't take it to the extremes they do. On the broad spectrum of human cultures, Americans are fairly "chummy" and open, or at least seeming openness is encouraged.

"What feels slimy is finding out the popular site you like is chummy with scum like Violentacrez the guy who started 90% of the worst of the worst subreddits.

If you are, I respectfully suggest that your FAQ needs to be a lot less chummy and a lot more to-the-point regarding the questions above so potential customers like me can see that.

"He read all the right books on management and took the advice to heart: dont get too chummy, shield your team from anything they dont need to know, ask them to identify roadblocks to progress, reward them all equally.

Their profits will not suffer because there will likely be similar ventures in other countries, and all in all it will be very similar to space exploration at the height of its frenzy, before everyone got all chummy with common goals for humanity and whatnot.

I would add this attitude to the long list of "counterintuitive things you should do if you want to be successful in the long run".Sure, a company where everyone is all chummy and nobody disagrees once a decision has been made, that sort of place might be successful in the short run.

Chummy definitions

adjective

(used colloquially) having the relationship of friends or pals

See also: matey pally palsy-walsy

adjective

(used informally) associated on close terms; "a close friend"; "the bartender was chummy with the regular customers"; "the two were thick as thieves for months"

See also: buddy-buddy