From taking the bins out to doing your share of the washing up, there are a multitude of things for married couples to argue about.

And now beleaguered husbands are taking to Twitter to vent about their demanding wives - with the best tweets featuring in an Imgur thread compiled by 'buggiest', which has been viewed more than 250,000 times.

Josh, from Boston, Massachusetts, confessed he 'didn't know there was a wrong way to put milk back in the fridge' until he got married.

Husbands are taking to Twitter to vent about their demanding wives - with the best tweets featuring in an Imgur thread which has already been viewed more than 250,000 times

He added: 'My wife said I needed to grow up. I was speechless. It's hard to say anything when you have 45 gummy bears in your mouth'.

While Pete Lynch recalled offering to make dinner for his wife, only to announce that they were 'out of oven'.

He also wrote: 'Marriage teaches you a lot about yourself. For instance, I've learned that I don't need to use so many paper towels, and they're expensive.'

Frustrated husband Kent Graham wrote: 'I don't understand how God can have Ten Commandments for the whole world, and my wife can have 152 just for our house.'

Daniel Carrillo wrote: 'Marriage is just texting each other "Do we need anything from the grocery store?" a bunch of times until one of you dies.'

Food critic Troy Johnson tweeted: 'Marriage is mostly about knowing which hand towels you can use and which ones are for the better people who visit your wife's home.'

Simon Holland recalled: 'Headed to Goodwill to buy back something I donated yesterday because this is my lesson on why marriage communication is so important,' in a tweet that has been liked and shared hundreds of times.

Frustrated husband Kent Graham wrote: 'I don't understand how God can have Ten Commandments for the whole world, and my wife can have 152 just for our house'

He also gave a tongue-in-cheek account of 'thermostat negotiations' between himself and his spouse.

Rodney Lacroix summed up an apparently commonplace conversation between him and his wife. 'Me: I spent HALF as much as YOU usually do on groceries. Wife: Congratulations. [2 hours later] Me: We have nothing to eat in this house.'

While David Hughes told how his default reaction to greeting his wife at the door was: 'I'm afraid there's been a terrible accident involving all the things you asked me to do today.'

Just Bill tweeted: 'If my wife ever hired a private detective to follow me, it would be to get pictures of me not using the coupons I said I used.'

He wasn't alone in having a coupon-obsessed wife, with Mr. Peel recounted a conversation between himself at a restaurant: 'I'll have the chicken finger platter & my lovely wife will have -

'*hands over coupon. Something of equal or lesser value.'

Abe Yospe wrote: 'When my wife falls asleep in a public place, I shake her a little and yell, "DON'T YOU DIE ON ME!" People always clap when she wakes up.'

Keith recalled telling his wife: 'Look, I love you, But I made exactly the right amount of cheese & crackers I want to eat right now.

'Wife: But I only... Me: EXACTLY the amount.'

While Kent joked that rather than getting the silent treatment when he is in trouble, his wife gives him the 'speaking treatment'.

A comedy writer tweeted: 'Relationship status: My wife asked me what I wanted for dinner and then told me I was wrong.'

One Twitter user known only as The Glad Stork confessed: 'When my wife p***es me off, I get on her Pinterest and pin lots of mediocre s***, like cupcakes that just look like cupcakes.'

One man's summary of marriage was simply: 'You pee too loud', while Zack's was 'I was just about to do that chore that I see you're starting now.'

Nice Eric joked that his couple's therapy session was stalled when his wife accused him of 'replacing words with animal names just to annoy me,' to which he replied: 'I don't do it on porpoise.'

Rodney Lacroix tweeted, 'My wife probably tells me that I never listen to her,' while one man wrote: 'The Mrs and I have been married so long she can finish my sentences. She also starts most of them and supplies the middle parts too.'