Sweet or small confection coated in chocolate.
1Eliza hesitated, but finally reached out her hand and took the bon-bon.
2Jack looked at the bon-bon, and considered the size of the jar.
3Even a bon-bon which the landlady had given her she was not eating.
4I'd never been a woman to say no to a bon-bon.
5Flag stickpins, bon-bon boxes representing flags, or some patriotic book would be appropriate.
6No less an authority than The People, an English publication, dropped this cultural bon-bon to the masses.
7What mighty agency had thrown out of his bon-bon box, this big red bon-bon on two legs?
8She was sitting next to Johnnie Jones, and she asked him to open his bon-bon without pulling it apart.
9You never hear me talk about clothes and such twaddle,' said Stuffy, suppressing a yawn, and feeling for another bon-bon wherewith to refresh himself.
10Then she picked up the box of bon-bons that was beside her.
11I have just received a fresh box of bon-bons from New York.
12And this from the man who had thought flowers and bon-bons bribery!
13She would eat no more bon-bons; she threw the box away.
14And I like fairy tales next to bon-bons and new hats.
15Upstairs with the ladies he and his bon-bons had met with unprecedented success.
16I'll make Vera a pale pink one and fill it with French bon-bons.