A woman who engages in sexual intercourse for money.
Sinônimos
Examples for "whore"
Examples for "whore"
1Of course O'Melaghlin would come here, dragging the de Valery whore behind.
2What I said was this: I merely wished to question the whore!
3The artist was at least as present in her as the whore.
4Funny too-youknow how they say a whore makes a good wife?
5Neil was a little whore; had been for quite a few years.
1Some recipes, however, I prefer unmodified: my mother's Bakewell tart, for example.
2Give it a go and try this South African milk tart today.
3Line the tart case and refrigerate for at least half an hour.
4The debates between her and my sister grew more tart and violent.
5I've often seen her here and if anyone's a tart it's her.'
1Not many mothers branded their daughters with a prostitute's name at birth.
2You can feel no pity for the murderer, the thief, the prostitute.
3He was the son of a Greek rhetor and a Campanian prostitute.
4A prostitute had made an attempt on the life of a citizen.
5But I've heard rumors already of a plot to prostitute the law.
1Kratinus plainly speaks of her as a harlot in the following lines:
2People polluted with this defection appear under the image of a harlot.
3She arrayed herself in flesh-taking ornaments-gold ,andprecious stones, like an harlot.
4Beware, I say, of the papist Eve, the harlot and the Jezebel.
5How Apuleius was handled by the Bakers wife, which was a harlot.
1Poor Cyprian is off to Marienbad and I must go with him.
2Cyprian Eveleth said to his sister, after a brief word of greeting.
3Cyprian also charges one of his deacons with fraud, extortion, and adultery.
4Cyprian's care not only extended over Carthage, but to Numidia and Mauritania.
5St. Cyprian, A.D. 250, does not include Hebrews among St. Paul's Epistles.
1They chafed and bantered and stormed every café and cocotte impartially, recklessly.
2Now Brochet was the surname of a certain fascinating cocotte.
3She probably thinks these delays and subterfuges are necessary to differentiate her from a cocotte.
4She lived for most part like a mere cocotte.
5She will end"-hemade the gesture of counting money into his hand-"shewill end as a cocotte."
1Oh, I'm a sporting lady, dear master.
1I expect the church will be full of jaded ladies of pleasure, all waiting to forbid the banns.'
2This play was greatly condemned by the critics; some incidents in it are borrowed from Shirley's Lady of Pleasure.
3The tables win enormously, and so do the ladies of pleasure; but the winnings of these go back again to the tables.
4As Evelyn, the diarist, puts it, this great man's fall was the work of "the buffoones and ladys of pleasure."
5This sham petition occasioned a pretended answer, entitled, The Gracious Answer of the Most Illustrious Lady of Pleasure, the Countess of Castlem .
1You think I'm as bad as any woman of the street.
2Jimmie got drunk and wasted a part of his money on a woman of the street.
3As between the three-thenoblewoman, the working woman and the woman of the street-themedical officials in charge made no distinction whatsoever.
4Even the Saviour had been kind to the woman of the streets.
5Let the streets do their will with the woman of the streets.
1Your mom's a pretty fancy woman.
2Fellows don't generally fancy women that age; they like slips of girls.
3As these fancy women knew all too well, one didn't achieve, one connived.
4Miss Fairfax fancies women can have no ambition on their own account, Cecil.
5The johns like to think they're getting treated fancy by the fancy women.
1Remember me, I'm the working girl, and I happen to be exhausted.
2If she was a working girl, she definitely wasn't from my agency.
3If I'd been an honest working girl he'd never have noticed me.
4If I don't understand men, Mr. Harwood, no poor working girl does.
5Only a working girl, plain in appearance and in dress, diffident and self-effacing.
1He cannot plead his estimation with you; he hath been a bawd.
2But the drysian said the bawd had been to her with various maladies.
3Or until my fine bawd can scrape together a few ducats.
4Upon this we parted, and the same bawd presently provided her another keeper.
5Elias was friends with every bawd, whore, and merrymaker in town.
6PRUDE, n. A bawd hiding behind the back of her demeanor.
7Some liken it to the Arabic dalilah, a woman who misguides, a bawd.
8Go; thou wast born a bastard, and thou'lt die a bawd.
9Wells, though acquitted of the felony, was punished as a bawd.
10Bailey is an intellectual bawd with an abnormal itch for notoriety.
11She plays the old bawd as a seasoned flirt with a glittering eye.
12He's a notorious bawd and a womanizer-anexceptionally vigorous one, even by my standards.
13His wife was a ragpicker and a bawd, but she had plenty of shrewdness.
14Pompey, you are partly a bawd, Pompey, howsoever you colour it in being a tapster.
15Is she a bawd that she should bargain?
16No sooner had I reached the place, than that French bawd, her mother, screamed out: Pagolo!