Download

How To Use Accost In A Sentence

  • On my way home I was accosted by a mewing tabby and white shorthair cat that proceeded to follow me home.
  • As they were filming some of their beach-heavy programming, I was accosted at several points by camera crews and veejays.
  • As far as being recognized ( "accosted") in LA ... you're welcome. Steve Skrovan: An Open Letter to Eric Alterman
  • I am walking speedily along New York's Fifth Avenue when this elegant stranger accosts me, grabs my arm in a vice-like grip and hisses, ‘Where did you get that pin?’
  • But before she spoke Ms Morris was accosted by a placard-waving group of about 20 protesters demanding that they should be paid all year round, not just in term time.
Enhance Your English Writing Skills
Fix common errors and boost your confidence in every sentence.
Get started
for free
Enhance Your English Writing Skills
  • Almost from the moment you step off the plane, you will be accosted by touts, hawkers and rogues.
  • Walking in soft finnesko, the magnetician opens an inner door, to be at once accosted by darkness, made more intense after the white glare of the snow. The Home of the Blizzard Being the Story of the Australasian Antarctic Expedition, 1911-1914
  • A very peculiar, literate yet threatening bagman, Fred, accosts him.
  • I recall accosting some rowdy teenagers outside my house: my few cautionary words were met with a hail of stones, too small to injure but enough to frighten and humiliate.
  • They saw him slouch for'ard after breakfast, and, like a mendicant, with outstretched palm, accost a sailor. LOVE OF LIFE
  • They were about to go through a hatchway down to the bilges when they were suddenly accosted by a watchman, who had heard noises and left the party to investigate. Shadow Knights
  • Nelson, and the family tradition is that the hero accosted him with a kind smile and said, 'Give me a shake of your daddle, my boy, for I've only one to shake _you_ with.' Charles Philip Yorke, Fourth Earl of Hardwicke, Vice-Admiral R.N. — a Memoir
  • They're accosted by Joan Rivers who demands to know which designer made their gown, their jewels, their evening bag.
  • Once aboard, to his fugitive embarrassment, he is accosted by a young girl he vaguely remembers.
  • He shall come, sidesmen accostant, by aryan jubilarian and on brigadier-general Nolan or and buccaneer-admiral Browne, with — who can doubt it? — his golden beagles and his white elkox terriers for a hunting on our littlego illcome faxes. Finnegans Wake
  • I recall accosting some rowdy teenagers outside my house: my few cautionary words were met with a hail of stones, too small to injure but enough to frighten and humiliate.
  • Chaucer lived he must have heard this very language, matter of fact, unmetaphorical, far better fitted for narrative than for analysis, capable of religious solemnity or of broad humour, but very stiff material to put on the lips of men and women accosting each other face to face. The Common Reader
  • As a libertarian and strong believer of individual rights and free markets, I often get "accosted" by folks saying that I must want the environment just to go to hell. Coyote Blog » 2004 » October
  • The suspect was accosted and arrested as he disembarked from a plane at Goma International Airport where the rangers had been waiting for his arrival from Walikale in the interior of the country and close to gorilla habitat. Global Voices in English » DR Congo: Baby Gorilla Rescued in Trafficking Bust
  • You're strolling absent-mindedly down Coney Street, minding your own business and glancing idly at the displays in shop windows, when an officious little man in a yellow reflective jacket pops out of nowhere and accosts you.
  • Well, actually, I chose not to accost people during their dinner, but I did end up asking about 300 people both inside education and outside education what they thought the purpose of public education was. Heather Wolpert-Gawron: What Is the Purpose of Public Education?
  • She was accosted by a complete stranger.
  • During my tenth year, the man who had accosted me while I was jogging joined the church. Christianity Today
  • You mistake, knight; 'accost' is front her, board her, woo her, assail her. Twelfth Night; or What You Will
  • Use private security goons to accost students (who were not, as predicted, permitted to speak); Archive 2009-08-01
  • This morning's horror, the sallow? faced pervert who'd accosted her, all faded at the sight of the glorious bewinged apparition paralleling the bus. The Metrognome and Other Stories
  • You're strolling absent-mindedly down Coney Street, glancing idly at the displays in shop windows, when an officious little man in a yellow reflective jacket pops out of nowhere and accosts you.
  • Prince was doughtier than he, sheathed his scymitar and stood till the young man came up to him, when he accosted him courteously and said to him, “O youth, art thou a man or a Jinni?” The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • He gets off the train any old place, trusting to luck, and goes around the platform accosting one person after another, each time mumbling the same syllables: bou bournous…
  • Those who allegedly accosted him thought to assault him for being not "propagandized" enough. I Know You Are, But What Am I?
  • A man had accosted me in the street.
  • Probably the first thing unique you will discover is that the people you encounter will go much further to please you than you are accostomed to in the US. Monterrey Help Please
  • BTW, the first two definitions of 'accost' from dictionary. com: Boston.com Most Popular
  • A famous Japanese couple visiting as tourists get accosted and mugged on the streets of New York.
  • In the garden he found The gentle conqueress, Mrs. MacKenzy, Who accosted him in the most friendly manner. The Letters of Horace Walpole, Earl of Orford — Volume 3
  • She was accosted in the street by a complete stranger.
  • Chamberlain accosted the old woman, saying, “What damsel is this?” The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • If accosted on a reconnoitre, they claimed they were looking for scrap.
  • It's rather nice to not be accosted with dimwits and society children.
  • I get so tired of getting accosted by stewbums when I'm eating lunch downtown.
  • The police officer was accosted by the man who took offence at him buying the replacement laces for his boots. Times, Sunday Times
  • They spread hatred for us with a psychotic mass murderer and then they assailed the capital and when we moved to accost them they mysteriously withdrew.
  • Characterizing Jews as cerebral nomads, submissive and victimized by nature, he almost seems to hate and accost them as a means to elicit their retaliation. Overlooked Movie Monday: The Believer » Scene-Stealers
  • Ideal as a watchdog, this dog will neither be aggressive nor cringe with fear on accosting a stranger.
  • She raised her face veil139 and, showing two black eyes fringed with jetty lashes, whose glances were soft and languishing and whose perfect beauty was ever blandishing, she accosted the Porter and said in the suavest tones and choicest language, “Take up thy crate and follow me.” The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • A stranger accosted him on the bus.
  • Since I didn’t want to get accosted is the main reason I hadn’t said anything. WEINSTEINS BE ALL HATIN’ ON KEVIN SMITH
  • Fans besiege his house daily, while he is regularly accosted by members of the public seeking anything from an autograph to a fist fight.
  • On accosting a prey, tarantulas paralyse it by sinking the fangs and injecting venom.
  • Earlier in the morning, jockey Walter Cullum accosted King while the latter spoke with reporters.
  • I had not looked up on their approach, and now, when accosted, I slowly and painfully straightened my back, after the manner of roadmen; spat vigorously, after the manner of the low Scot; and regarded them steadily before replying. The Thirty-Nine Steps
  • This morning's horror, the sallow-faced pervert who'd accosted her, all faded at the sight of the glorious bewinged apparition paralleling the bus. The Metrognome and other Stories
  • When he alighted from his beast they accosted him and enquired the cause of his change from poverty to prosperity, and he told them all that had happened to him from incept to conclusion. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • Old soldiers, I know not why, seem to be more accostable than old sailors. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 11, No. 67, May, 1863
  • If accosted on a reconnoitre, they claimed they were looking for scrap.
  • Everybody can stop e-mailing, IMing, and accosting me on the street: I had absolutely nothing to do with this.
  • The police officer was accosted by the man who took offence at him buying the replacement laces for his boots. Times, Sunday Times
  • Sorry to accost you, but there's something I felt I should tell you, she said, with a concerned expression. Gay Dad
  • No sooner had I consumed my third drink in the Devil than I was accosted by a delightful small flower-selling child who asked me for twopence for a daisy. Clockwork Angel
  • He speaks, among other things, of his_ "capricci nel filosofar delle cose naturali" _and says on this point: _ "Per il che fece nell'animo un concetto si eretico che e 'non si accostava a qualsi voglia religione, stimando per avventura assai piu lo esser filosofo che cristiano" _ (see the first edition of_ 'Le Vite'_). The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci — Complete
  • You can't walk down the streets in the touristy harbor front area without being accosted by ambitious salesmen insisting you order a suit from the tailor they represent.
  • Hamilcar offered in his name roasted barley and pieces of raw meat; people accosted one another, and embraced one another with tears; the Tyrian towns were taken, the nomads dispersed, and all the Salammbo
  • The person thus accosting Nydia was a lady of a handsome but a bold and unmaidenly countenance: it was Julia, the daughter of Diomed.
  • Where Sin, Sorrow, and Sufferings, of all Kinds, and from all Quarters, accost and attack her, and from which she is perpetually wishing to be delivered; and yet is loth to quit this her Earthly Mansion: Which Fondness for this transitory Life, and Fear to imbark for a Better in the Ocean of Eternity, must surely proceed from a Deficiency of Faith, and the Want of a firm Belief of Future Happiness. A Patch-Work Screen for the Ladies
  • As she got off the plane in Belgium, she was accosted by reporters asking if she was taking anabolic steroids.
  • A little old lady answers a knock at the door where she's accosted by a vacuum cleaner salesman.
  • But I would daresay that most of us would not go accost a stranger at a party or even someone who knows us well with endless accounts of our kids stories (a blog doesnt count cause you dont have to read it) without so much as a ‘So whats going on in your life?’. toyfoto Said, Who’s The Dummy, Mummy? | Her Bad Mother
  • The police officer was accosted by the man who took offence at him buying the replacement laces for his boots. Times, Sunday Times
  • Examing the display outside of my chosen shop, I was accosted by some youths, of thirteen years or so, who desired that I bought some fireworks on their behalf, a transaction I declined.
  • But surely there's a less noisome method of distributing cash than one in which innocent pedestrians are accosted by somebody not dissimilar to the last person to have mugged them?
  • A stranger accosted him on the bus.
  • Three days later, in a related case (the records are sketchy, but the matching surnames in this small community suggest a link) ,143 Bridget St. Croix (presumably a relative of Ann) complained that on the previous evening she had encountered Thomas Tobin (possibly Ellen's brother and the victim of Ann's rock-throwing episodes), who had "accosted" her and said, "now you vagabond [w] hore I have you. Gutenber-e Help Page
  • You may occasionally be accosted in a public place by an attaccabottoni, a doleful bore who buttonholes people and tells sad, pointless tales.
  • Above them, the beast—her hippogryph, as Broll had suspected even before he had accosted him—made a low, angry squawk. WORLD OF WARCRAFT STORMRAGE
  • I walk into a house in one of the towns and an old man accosts me ‘Hi there young man.’
  • His story begins in 1972 when Douglas was accosted at a bus stop in Edinburgh by two bolshie 12-year-olds.
  • His tones of salutation, at these moments, were soft, his manner respectful, even graceful; and while there was nothing of the abashedness of the inferior, there was also no offensive familiarity, in the occasional conversations held by him with the different individuals, or groups, who surrounded and accosted him. The Canadian Brothers, or the Prophecy Fulfilled a Tale of the Late American War — Complete
  • Garganus in Apulia, which had been sanctified by the apparition of the archangel Michael, 18 they were accosted by a stranger in the Greek habit, but who soon revealed himself as a rebel, a fugitive, and a mortal foe of the The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
  • He shall come, sidesmen accostant, by aryan jubilarian and on brigadier-general Nolan or and buccaneer-admiral Browne, with — who can doubt it? — his golden beagles and his white elkox terriers for a hunting on our littlego illcome faxes. Finnegans Wake
  • Supposing he should now find her in a more conversible humour, he proceeded to accost her. A Legend of Montrose
  • In another instance, Hodson alleged, a female visiting professor complained that Reader had aggressively "accosted" her in a hallway about her application for a job at Scripps. The Athens NEWS :: Athens, Ohio's only locally-owned newspaper :: Home
  • There's a famous family story about the time my parents went to a neighbourhood party and a woman accosted my mother over the punchbowl, raving about what a good listener my father was.
  • I do, however, have a problem with people accosting me on the street and begging me in their particularly weird way to donate money to African babies.
  • We also spotted a SUSPICIOUSLY PALE young lady applying for employment, but she MYSTERIOUSLY VANISHED before we could accost her! Stuff We Did On Our Vacation, Part One; Or, A Pictorial Essay on Vampire Habitats
  • During my tenth year, the man who had accosted me while I was jogging joined the church. Christianity Today
  • The victim then was accosted from behind by 31 year old Michael W. Coleman Jr who reached around the neck of the victim in a "headlock" type maneuver then held a knife to the victim's throat. WMDT Top News Stories
  • Now as my eyes fell on her, I was captivated by her and my vitals trembled and meseemed my heart flew forth of my breast; so I stood before her and I accosted her with this verse, The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • I accost strangers on airplanes to show them how dandy it is to load thousands of pages including this newspaper onto something the size of a shirt cardboard. The Joy of Reading 'Pinocchio'—On Paper
  • The blackstaffer and the beggar had left the square, but a small figure in gray accosted Kharl as he passed the empty stone sitting wall. Wellspring of Chaos
  • More recently, we've seen six-foot koalas accosting political leaders and asking in depth questions on real issues.
  • Outer and inner turmoil cross over the centuries in chiastic form; the new millennium, foreseen in 1799 and accosted in 1999, holds out scant chiliastic promise.
  • Despite the fact that they're probably going to win a considerable number of congressional seats on Tuesday, the far right appears to be unsatisfied with a significant electoral victory and is supplementing its would-be success by physically accosting anyone who isn't sporting an array of teabags erotically dangled from the brim of a tri-cornered hat. Bob Cesca: When in Doubt, They Beat Up Women
  • A white-faced Mathilda sped by me in the gallery but Benjamin was shouting for me so I decided not to accost her.
  • As Jake ducked under the crime scene tape a tall, heavyset man with grey hair accosted him.
  • Making my way through the train I was accosted by a very angry woman.
  • In the streets he is accosted by whores, hustlers and queer-bashers.
  • A few minutes ago he was accosted by reporters after locking horns with the Prime Minister during question period.
  • The Spectator editor, as is his custom, seemed a little vague as he accosted the former party leader.
  • A ( Alice ): Let me guess. A masher accosted you?
  • It won't be long now until it will be no longer safe to walk the streets, without hoards of mad students in tartan trousers and kaftans accosting you with home made fliers.
  • Finally, I got my dander up and accosted him in his office.
  • THERE'S (yet another) famous family story about the time my parents went to a neighbourhood party and a woman accosted my mother over the punchbowl, raving about what a good listener my father was.
  • The larger London department stores are moving away from your more traditional Grotto based lap-sitting experiences and towards a more drive-by Santa encounter where the failed beardy actor accosts you on the shop floor.
  • It's not that I make a habit of accosting MPs in health food shops, it's just that I mistakenly believed I knew him.
  • I certainly wouldn't put up with being 'accosted' by foreigners who have no business investing in my country and whose noses deserve to be broken for their disregard of my high social status. A Sincere Apology
  • Yes, I was accosted, again, in my driveway with two very thickset people, attempted to get into the car at night.
  • Ideal as a watchdog, this dog will neither be aggressive nor cringe with fear on accosting a stranger.
  • In the early 1820s, when settlers began to occupy Xhosa territory, Xhosa raiders sometimes accosted English herdboys to steal the mother-of-pearl buttons from their shirts.
  • The security officers had apparently been watching her steal in the store and waited until she had got outside, thinking she had escaped with her loot, to accost her.
  • I considering accosting a hapless victim in the produce department.
  • He was morose to all that stood in awe of him, and caressed all such as accosted him with familiarity .... The Works of Lord Byron. Vol. 6
  • After many years of this Sisyphean activity, I was accostedlast month (in my post-Christmas clear out mode) in the Princess Alice Hospice shop in Kingston, when dropping off a bag of (what I thought to be) a rather saleable suit, some books, a pair of shoes and some outgrown children's cardigans. Princess Alice Hospice
  • Ordinarily this would have given her pause before purchasing the bar; however, she dismissed it quickly as she had no intention of accosting customers about their bar tabs.
  • One afternoon, taking a glass of sangaree at the tavern, I was accosted by one of our late mids who had come on shore with some others to what he called wet his commission. A Sailor of King George
  • I remember one mum accosting me at preschool to ask if I really had to teach my son the word uvula at age three. Archive 2006-09-01
  • Aussi dans le meme delire ce matin avec Cesse on va dans un quartier pour chercher les papiers d'une camarade absente et on ecoutait "parle a ma main" a fond comme des mongols et la au moment ou ca dit "le mec m'accoste avec son pauvre survet 'Lacoste" ... Pinku-tk Diary Entry
  • His story begins in 1972 when Douglas was accosted at a bus stop in Edinburgh by two bolshie 12-year-olds.
  • As the bell ceases its clanging on reaching the platform, he seems to pull his cap down purposely, and otherwise to gather himself into the plushy depths of his warm furs, he hires the first cabman that accosts him, shoves in his heavy valise, which is all the baggage he has, and in a gruff sort of voice, orders to be driven to the "Albion Hotel. Honor Edgeworth Ottawa's Present Tense
  • Thank fortune, at that instant we came upon an officer, whom I accosted at a distance, explained my case and produced my card and my pastry baker.
  • I am accosted byJeanCocteau who counsels me: readMarinetti finish theBrandenburgpoem understandThe Gas Heart memorize the Fifteen Propositions of God take seriously the question what have I got to lose the goat in my throat companionless runs wild The Sky is Simply White
  • A group of teenagers thinking they were tough, accosted us in an alley.
  • As a proof Of this, one evening, as I sat outside the cabin, reading, a young man, slightly "corned," or overtaken in his drink, accosted me abruptly - Wild Life in the Rocky Mountains
  • Witnesses said the abductors accosted him Saturday night in western Baghdad and shoved him into the trunk of a car after pistol-whipping him.
  • Maybe the authorities should put some structures in place, like perhaps a truant officer to accost these truants.
  • On the Place he was accosted by the blind man, who, having dragged himself as far as Yonville, in the hope of getting the antiphlogistic pomade, was asking every passer-by where the druggist lived. Madame Bovary
  • Page 12 grace at every accost; the tone of his voice was mild and subdued, and in short, Scipio, though black, had all the unction of an old gentleman. Swallow Barn, or A Sojourn in the Old Dominion. In Two Volumes. Vol. I.
  • As he accosted parents outside a school in Rotherhithe with a final piece of canvassing yesterday afternoon, he predicted his party would get the most seats since 1923 and the biggest share of the vote since 1983.
  • Aussi dans le meme delire ce matin avec Cesse on va dans un quartier pour chercher les papiers d'une camarade absente et on ecoutait "parle a ma main" a fond comme des mongols et la au moment ou ca dit "le mec m'accoste avec son pauvre survet 'Lacoste" ... Pinku-tk Diary Entry
  • Walking towards the hospital, near to where he'd parked his car, Dan was accosted by two student nurses.
  • Every few feet he was accosted by more doting women than a film actor.
  • Once at the door, the memories halted and the silence accosted her with a tone of accusation.
  • A man of slightly unsober dignity accosted me in the Gut, and asked if A Poor Man's House
  • That he might profit as much as possible by this situation, he went up and accosted every person in the pit, with whom he ever had least communication, whispered and laughed with an affected air of familiarity, and even bowed at a distance to some of the nobility, on the slender foundation of having stood near them at court, or presented them with a pinch of rappee at The Adventures of Peregrine Pickle
  • During my tenth year, the man who had accosted me while I was jogging joined the church. Christianity Today
  • Along the way she is accosted by ravenous predators.

Report a problem

Please indicate a type of error

Additional information (optional):