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Discover Ludwig"play nasty" is a grammatically correct phrase and can be used in written English.
It means to behave in a mean, aggressive, or spiteful manner. Example: The two siblings always play nasty with each other, constantly arguing and trying to one-up each other.
Exact(11)
That's the wrong way round: act nice, play nasty is the rule.
Bonus worry: Trump has just given every country (especially China) the perfect excuse to play nasty on trade.
In the run-up to that election Mr Steyer showed he can play nasty: after four large corporations attacked his proposal, he ran ads branding them as California-hating tax-dodgers.
She is 24, engaged to be married and well aware that winning is harder than she made it look as a teenager, all too aware that big-match pressure can play nasty tricks on her second serve.
But wet-tree systems are the hardest to adapt to the harsh deep-sea environment, which involves not just extremely high pressure but chilling temperatures that can play nasty tricks on oil in a pipe.
These boys play nasty.
Similar(49)
"I don't know, maybe we play nastier after those games," Brooks said, borrowing a part of Popovich's motivational speech from Game 1. Games 3 and 4 are Thursday and Saturday in Oklahoma City, and while the Spurs put themselves in a position for a possible sweep, the Thunder clearly face adjustments.
The Tories cannot stop being the "nasty party" at home while playing nasty in Europe.
Jim Crace is not just playing nasty or satiric games with his disquieting amuse-gueules.
And I got to be on a horse.' Do you like playing nasty characters?
"They're playing nasty," said Raney, now living and training in Utah.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com