Wycherley borrows Viola; and Viola forthwith becomes a pandar of the basest sort.
2
In truth, he was in morals something between a pandar and a beggar.
3
Nature is a pandar, Time a wrecker, and Death a murderer.
4
Poetry stooped to be the pandar of every low desire.
5
The pirate sold; the pandar bought, that he might employ her as a prostitute; Seneca, Controv.
6
Such conditions would naturally be ideal for the owner of a house of ill fame, or for a pandar.
7
Failure to register was severely punished upon conviction, and this applied not only to the girl but to the pandar as well.
8
As he spoke thus a demon struck him with his scourge and said, "Begone, pandar, here are no women for coining."
9
The pandar was assured that a Christian man might innocently earn his living by carrying letters and messages between married women and their gallants.
10
Bullies and bawds, pandars and parasites: to enumerate their offenses would be to say the Decalogue backward.
11
Importuned with all this noise, the bird at last began to cry repeatedly with all its might, Pandar!
12
(Livy xxxix, 9-17), and the comedies of Plautus and Terence, in which the pandar and the harlot are familiar characters.