Use of wallflower in Sentences. 24 Examples
The examples include wallflower at the start of sentence, wallflower at the end of sentence and wallflower in the middle of sentence
For urdu meanings and examples of wallflower click here
wallflower at the end of sentence
- She'd rather stay home than be a wallflower.
- IT'd rat IT leave early than be a wallflower.
- She spent the whole evening being a wallflower.
- Step forward to dance, Mary, don't be a wallflower.
- She'd rather dance by herself than be a wallflower.
- In fact you could say that I was a real wallflower.
- Step forward to dance, Mary, don't be such a wallflower.
- Step forward to dance, Mary, do not be such a wallflower.
- She'd rather dance with her girl friends than be a wallflower.
- We all know some drop - dead beautiful person married to an unusually plain wallflower.
- Hey, there are even pastels like peach and lilac this season, so nobody has to be a wallflower.
- Ambitious, fleet-footed companies like Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn and Groupon have begun to make Google look like a wallflower.
wallflower in the middle of sentence
- I was something of a wallflower; I was terribly shy.
- Don't be such a wallflower - get up and dance with me.
- The worst of fates was to be a wallflower passed over and rejected.
- He had left his diaries, known as " wallflower ", when he left MI 5.
- Living it up! Sitting there like a teen-aged wallflower at a country hop .
- A wallflower is a man whose phone doesn't ring - even when he's in the bath.
- I was always wallflower in high school. I never liked to dance in front of people.
- Sooner or later someone would take pity on the poor wallflower and ask her to dance.
- The wallflower represents a shy, submissive individual who holds the glass protectively.
- Sometimes, Joan was the dowdy, make-up-less wallflower with curves that looked more like sacks.
- These were the flirt, the gossip, fun lover, wallflower , the ice - queen , the playboy, Jack - the - lad and browbeater.
- The wallflower : This is a shy, submissive individual who holds the glass protectively, not letting go, as though afraid somebody will take it away.