释义 |
Definition of seducer in English: seducernoun sɪˈdjuːsəsəˈd(j)usər 1A person who entices someone into sexual activity. a serial seducer with no moral compass Example sentencesExamples - He does not know that Harry is the would-be seducer of his seamstress daughter.
- According to an invention of the poet, the real Helen was detained in Egypt by its king, who sent the seducer Paris packing to Troy.
- The depiction of her as temptress echoes the clerical trope of woman as Eve, the seducer of men.
- The mighty legend of the Egyptian queen—seducer of two of the most powerful men in the world—springs to life this month at Houston Ballet.
- How can one tell the dancer from the dance, the seducer from the seduced?
- This memoir resembles a bedroom farce with the cheerful seducer rushing from tryst to tryst.
- Casanova, the 18th-century Italian seducer, was known for his lifelong battle with syphilis.
- Her role is subtly changed from a seducer to a lover.
- Her seducer re-enters her life, marries her, and makes a good husband.
- This long-desired union completely overshadows the rather questionable marriage of Olivia to her seducer.
- 1.1 A person who entices someone to do or believe something inadvisable or foolhardy.
Example sentencesExamples - He is a closer—a seducer of clients with his soft voice and good looks.
- He is the seducer on behalf of the life of crime—fast money, creature comforts, control.
- Heroin is a seducer that will stop at nothing until it consumes entire families and neighbourhoods.
- I think food is obviously a great seducer, and we've always known that.
- Cocaine is notorious for being a seducer of men and women alike.
- Victorian critics derided the advertisers as wicked seducers, but the ads were a favorite among readers.
- Deceivers, in the eighth circle of hell, are put into ten subdivisions, including seducers, flatterers, hypocrites, and false counsellors.
- They get into others' heads—they are seducers, manipulators, conmen, and often worse.
- The first aim of the Bolshevist seducer and sly talker is to make you doubt God.
- He tells people what they want to hear so he can use them, a seducer who gets them to buy into his evil plans and be complicit in them.
Rhymes Abu Musa, Appaloosa, babirusa, inducer, introducer, juicer, producer, reducer, rusa, sprucer, traducer Definition of seducer in US English: seducernounsəˈd(j)usərsəˈd(y)o͞osər 1A person who entices someone into sexual activity. a serial seducer with no moral compass Example sentencesExamples - How can one tell the dancer from the dance, the seducer from the seduced?
- The mighty legend of the Egyptian queen—seducer of two of the most powerful men in the world—springs to life this month at Houston Ballet.
- The depiction of her as temptress echoes the clerical trope of woman as Eve, the seducer of men.
- This long-desired union completely overshadows the rather questionable marriage of Olivia to her seducer.
- This memoir resembles a bedroom farce with the cheerful seducer rushing from tryst to tryst.
- Her role is subtly changed from a seducer to a lover.
- Casanova, the 18th-century Italian seducer, was known for his lifelong battle with syphilis.
- Her seducer re-enters her life, marries her, and makes a good husband.
- He does not know that Harry is the would-be seducer of his seamstress daughter.
- According to an invention of the poet, the real Helen was detained in Egypt by its king, who sent the seducer Paris packing to Troy.
- 1.1 A person who entices someone to do or believe something inadvisable or foolhardy.
Example sentencesExamples - He tells people what they want to hear so he can use them, a seducer who gets them to buy into his evil plans and be complicit in them.
- Heroin is a seducer that will stop at nothing until it consumes entire families and neighbourhoods.
- Cocaine is notorious for being a seducer of men and women alike.
- He is the seducer on behalf of the life of crime—fast money, creature comforts, control.
- The first aim of the Bolshevist seducer and sly talker is to make you doubt God.
- He is a closer—a seducer of clients with his soft voice and good looks.
- Victorian critics derided the advertisers as wicked seducers, but the ads were a favorite among readers.
- They get into others' heads—they are seducers, manipulators, conmen, and often worse.
- I think food is obviously a great seducer, and we've always known that.
- Deceivers, in the eighth circle of hell, are put into ten subdivisions, including seducers, flatterers, hypocrites, and false counsellors.
|