Talk or behave amorously, without serious intentions.
Sinônimos
Examples for "romance"
Examples for "romance"
1Just as Greece's odyssey enchanted Europe, surely hurling requires a new romance.
2Natural philosophy, like war and romance, is best done by young men.
3As an aside; there's a possible moment of confusion in romance too!
4This caution, however, could benefit the romance zone in an interesting way!
5I'm not so sure about the 'romance' part, either, to be honest.
1But none take it as far as the Central American glasswing butterfly.
2I mean, really: who breaks a butterfly on a Panamanian shell company?
3The abdomen under the wings of the butterfly still represents the larva.
4The chaos butterfly was a great enough prize to fuel anyone's ambitions.
5The chink in his armour could be the 100m butterfly final today.
1Villa, however, continue to flirt with the beginnings of a relegation problem.
2I expected him to flirt or ask how I liked the painting.
3Comes in here every few days, just to flirt with the girls.
4If Mansfield thought to flirt with his wife, he could think again.
5But in this street there are no fair neighbors to flirt with.
1Boil the roe fifteen minutes in salted water; then drain and mash.
2The first reports on this superhero mash-up did indeed emerge in August.
3Nonetheless, the motivation and momentum for media mash-ups will persist, he said.
4Puree potatoes through a moule food mill, potatoe ricer or simply mash.
5I thank you for your consideration, but please no more mash notes.
1Criminals are becoming obstinate; they dally forever, clogging the processes of justice.
2I thank you for that little confidence; but I must not dally.
3To avoid pursuing that thought any further, I dally over the newspaper.
4Sire and sons returned from the cemetery invigorated for their dally labours.
5Maitland did not dally long in the Levant after getting Barton's letter.
1Eve is somewhat of a coquette even in the state of innocence.
2Angélique could coquette in half-meanings with any lady of honor at Court.
3She might as well have played the coquette in speech as writing.
4Claudine was a coquette; but she had a great many other vices.
5The torments of jealousy the cruel coquette made me endure were horrible.
1She is going there to copy it, not to philander with Alec.
2So it won't matter if he does want to philander, George.
3There is nothing particularly glamorous about the way Philander plays his cricket.
4Wanderers will play host to Vernon Philander's final Test for South Africa.
5Professor Porter and Mr. Philander were deeply interested in examining the skeletons.
1In rallying, people can have a chat up until we set off.
2Then, it is said, he tried to chat up GlaxoSmithKline but got nowhere.
3Let Appleby chat up the witness, predictable waste of time that would be.
4His first few attempts to chat up women were met with blunt rejection.
5Oh, yeah, there's the guy you want to chat up about Nikolaev history.
1Even to the end she would deck herself and coquet to her glass.
2Without any need of self-restraint, no wish to coquet ever entered her head.
3What think you, Mr Walpole, of our two coquet Irish beauties?
4We have no such character here as a coquet, but alas!
5What you want is a chance to coquet with him.
6But with their intention she did not coquet; as to that she was in earnest.
7For the latter purpose she would coquet first with one party, then with the other.
8He played some, but to pass away the time rather than to coquet with fortune.
9Give me your lips, child, and coquet no more.
10No, I will not coquet with you, Weeliam.
11She laugh and make the mock at him, and play coquet with the others before his face.
12I didn't think you had it in you to coquet, but it seems all women are alike.
13I now think you are more than half a coquet, and I like you for your roguery.
14He would have preferred to coquet with the enemy for a while from the safety of his saddle.
15The audacious little imp of an idea peeped around corners in Katie's consciousness and tried to coquet with her.
16When he had moved away to the depth of the gallery, the priestess began to coquet with the Harran man.
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coquet
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