A dissolute man in fashionable society.
Sinónimos
Examples for "blood"
Examples for "blood"
1In an instant you forget; the sky is bright; the blood pounds.
2The blood flows into the chest; it fills the lungs; he suffocates.
3In addition to diabetes, high-blood pressure and certain cancers are also possible.
4Vegetable blood changes colour in the leaves; experiment with spurge; with picris.
5He choked; the blood beat in his head; he was at bursting-point.
1Competition Commissioner Neelie Kroes has said the current system rip offs consumers.
2Science ministers come and go without saying a word about this rip-off.
3Last year alone, seven people drowned as the result of a rip.
4Then she saw the rip's true shape...and the beginnings of a solution.
5Someone has opened and used the Magimix rip-off from the late 90s.
1You know he used to be quite a rake in his day.
2Price, Weber help Canadiens rake Leafs MONTREAL -A healthy Carey Price.
3This is a rake's progress that cannot be sustained for much longer.
4A family beckoned and taught me how to use the rake myself.
5So what exactly did Kim do to rake in some serious dough?
1Ninety minutes for the paymaster to give the profligate state a drubbing.
2They kept their promise, and discovered him in the most profligate society.
3Yet, though profligate in one respect, he was temperate in every other.
4If we choose the branch that continues our profligate habits, we will.
5A lady has two sisters of the most profligate and unprincipled character.
1A heartless bastard, a rakehell, a libertine, and he made no apologies.
2He was Malachi Constant of Hollywood, California, the richest American-anda notorious rakehell.
3I haven't had a rakehell reputation in years.
4He was denying himself, when he usually took what he wanted like the rakehell he was.
5Though why she should think happiness would come from a rakehell like Rohan was quite ridiculous.
1Ligniere, a distinguished-looking roue, with disordered shirt-front arm-in-arm with christian de Neuvillette.
2A simpleton of twenty is better than a roue of twenty.
3As a man of pleasure, for instance, what more active roue than he?
4An accomplished roue always affects to moralise; it is a part of his character.
5Nat Hicks, tailor and roue, came to sit beside him.
6The next time that he saw her, she was with a famous roue in Philadelphia.
7The face that might have been handsome was the reflection of a roue, dashing, devilish.
8The Duke of Modena was with me, and you know what an enterprising roue he is.
9The old man was a notorious roue, of most unsavory reputation as a destroyer of innocence.
10If he is temperate at twenty years old, he will be a cowardly roue at fifty.
11Why have they abolished the roue chez nous?
12It appears that he is a dangerous roue who has made advances to a number of women.
13Philippe when they left the house revealed his poverty to Giroudeau, but the old roue reassured him.
14One day, on the Boulevard des Italiens, Serge met an old friend, the Baron de Prefont, a hardened 'roue'.
15With that he sneered and asked who had sat for the portrait of the Duke of Beaurivage, Geraldine's wornout roue.
16He can be as much of a roue as he chooses, so long as he respects our wives and daughters.