
But her mouth twitched in reply to his cheeky grin, and she sighed, visibly letting go some of her tension. cheeky adjective UK uk / ti.ki / us / ti.ki / Add to word list B2 slightly rude or showing no respect, but often in a funny way: She's got such a cheeky grin.

The cheeky thieves replaced the photos with a Dot Cotton ashtray.The anger that once greeted Clinton from opponents, and the cheeky irreverence even from sympathizers, may be receding.In the morning she had poached a short and cheeky interview with the woman just elected to head the Conservative Party.And doesn't she look cheeky in those figure-hugging pants.The smile that launched a career Fans of television presenter Michaela Strachan love her famous cheeky grin.What do you mean, I'm fat? You cheeky devil!.Behind his fabulous trumpet playing and cheeky alleged humour there's an intelligent, alert, artful mind at work.He tried talking but the teachers wouldn't listen and thought he was repeating words like a parrot or just being cheeky. cheek (n.) 'either of the two fleshy sides of the face below the eyes,' Old English ceace, cece 'jaw, jawbone,' in late Old English also 'the fleshy wall of the mouth,' of uncertain origin, from Proto-Germanic kaukon (source also of Middle Low German kake 'jaw, jawbone,' Middle Dutch kake 'jaw,' Dutch kaak ), not.


