OUTLAW:
Good one. Yeah, she'll still be ugly!
*********************
Sylvia:
Excellent!
Inexperienced writers think "he said," "she asked" become so boringly repetitive that they must tart up the dialogue tags with insane examples, such as I used in the first entry. Nix the adverbs.
Example 2, and your fine writing, do more to show, rather than tell, what the characters are thinking and/or doing. The simple and recommended dialogue tags (said/asked) actually become "invisible," unhampered by overuse of "Tom Swifties":
I need a pencil sharpener," said Tom bluntly.
"Oops! There goes my hat!" said Tom off the top of his head.
"I can no longer hear anything," said Tom deftly.
"I have a split personality," said Tom, being frank.
"This must be an aerobics class," Tom worked out.
"I couldn't believe there were 527,986 bees in the swarm!" Tom recounted.
"Don't you know my name?" asked Tom swiftly.
"Your fly is undone," was Tom's zippy rejoinder.
"I only have diamonds, clubs and spades," said Tom heartlessly.
"Don't add too much water," said Tom with great concentration.
"I wonder if there's a number between seven and nine," said Tom considerately.
"I manufacture tabletops for shops," said Tom counter-productively.
"It's not fair!" said Tom darkly.
"I haven't had any tooth decay yet," said Tom precariously.