Grimace in a sentence as a noun

We can enforce that norm by rewarding such questions with a grimace.

"This is why every time I hear a politician talk about "creating jobs," I grimace.

I grimace when I receive an invitation that has obviously been mass-sent.

Every time I see this, I can't decide whether to cackle in sadistic delight, or grimace in empathetic disgust.

The passive aggressive "rewarding with a grimace" creates a toxic work environment.

The nurses and doctors and everyone seemed to give quiet nods of agreement after days of failed attempts to mitigate the constant grimace of agony.

Grimace in a sentence as a verb

Also, no thread about Word would be complete without that mix of grimace and dismissive smirk we reserve for people who paste screen shots into a Word document, then attach it onto an email in order to send them to us.

As a mathematician, i grimace at the level of resistence I get from programmers as being too "theoretical".I try arguing, "but all your libraries do at low level is math calculations, don't you want any control over that?

I have a young cousin who is starting to show interest in programming, and when I think of showing her Objective-C, I grimace inside because it has taken me so long to become comfortable with it, and I'm coming from other languages and years of experience.

I strapped myself for another grimace filled ride, but Jim absolutely shattered all my expectations and prejudices with his tenderness and onscreen chemistry with Kate Winslet.... and then built them right back up again by starring in a series of inane flicks immediately after.

Parrots reason like three year old children[1], mice feel empathy and grimace in agony[2,3], elephants grieve[4] and birds hold funerals for their dead[5].When we harm or show an incorrect appreciation for other sentient beings, it shows not only disrespect and lack of understanding and compassion, but it diminishes human dignity.

Grimace definitions

noun

a contorted facial expression; "she made a grimace at the prospect"

See also: face

verb

contort the face to indicate a certain mental or emotional state; "He grimaced when he saw the amount of homework he had to do"