释义 |
harlothar‧lot /ˈhɑːlət $ ˈhɑːr-/ noun [countable] old use harlotOrigin: 1200-1300 Old French herlot ‘wanderer, beggar’ - And the harlot who bad lured Vechey to his doom?
- He shouts her out into the street for a harlot.
- Her point, when she told me, was that one need not have been the all-time harlot of the world.
- It sounded like the harlots, Isabel thought hysterically.
- Now the same diamonds are afforded by a television star or a talented harlot.
- That scheming, cheating harlot, whose son you have consorted with like a cheap jade.
- The prodigal son will feast with harlots no more.
- There are various Pelagias who are known as penitent harlots or virgin martyrs who died to escape a fate worse than death.
a prostitute |