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How To Use Admirer In A Sentence

  • It is this later Holiday which most recognise and her admirers point to her last years as her most compelling.
  • Britain has many admirers around the world, but who actually owns our green and pleasant land? The Sun
  • Like me, he was a disillusioned cynic, enjoyer of beer and a great admirer of a pretty face.
  • To Slegge's annoyance, he very soon found that if the prestige of the school was to be kept up Glyn and Singh must be in the eleven, for the former in a very short time was acknowledged to be the sharpest bowler in the school, while, from long practice together, Singh was an admirable wicket-keeper -- one who laughed at gloves and pads, was utterly without fear, and had, as Wrench said -- he being a great admirer of a game in which he never had a chance to play -- "a nye like a nork. Glyn Severn's Schooldays
  • To his admirers, and they are legion, the glabrous Ailes is something else entirely — a valiant freedom-fighter standing up to the perfidious liberal media elite. Meet the fantastic Mr Fox
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  • It's a delightful piece of absurdist nonsense, a sitcom designed to offend highbrow admirers of minimalist dance.
  • These normally nuanced characters briefly became vessels for issue-based polemic rather than wry, subtle dialogue - and even to unequivocal admirers, this is a serious wobble.
  • They may not win admirers but it does earn grudging admiration and respect. Times, Sunday Times
  • Arab dreams: Qaddafi (left) spent his youth as a fervent admirer of Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser, the pan-Arab nationalist icon of the era.
  • Far better than those fusty old democracies, mutter the admirers. Times, Sunday Times
  • This is an essential purchase for any admirer of Barbirolli.
  • The pop star was followed by a train of admirers.
  • Jennifer Lopez, in a strapless dress and an upswept hairstyle, waved from a balcony to admirers on the floor of Union Station at the Latino Inaugural Gala on Sunday night. Life of the Party: Latin Flair in Washington - The Caucus Blog - NYTimes.com
  • But her no-nonsense approach has won her scores of admirers. Times, Sunday Times
  • The tape recording purports to be of a conversation between the princess and a secret admirer.
  • That makes this new release an exceptionally attractive one, and essential listening for this much-loved violinist's admirers.
  • Brother Jonathan," then just published by Blackwood in three large volumes, was read to him every night for weeks, and greatly to his satisfaction, as I then understood; though it seems by what Dr. Bowring -- I beg his pardon, Sir John Bowring -- says on the subject, that the "white-haired sage" was wide enough awake, on the whole, to form a pretty fair estimate of its unnaturalness and extravagance: being himself a great admirer of Richardson's ten-volume stories, like The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 16, No. 97, November, 1865
  • Even a staunch admirer of Turner, the redoubtable art critic Brian Sewell wrote at the time the Tate was mounting its campaign to save The Blue Rigi painting from being sold abroad: This is just bloody silly. A legacy Turner would have approved of | Charles Saatchi
  • Wrangham -- a college acquaintance of mine, -- an admirer of me, and a pitier of my principles; -- one to George Augustus Pollen, Esq.; one to Biographia Epistolaris, Volume 1.
  • Like the first incarnation of the band, it will provide part of a foundation for new admirers and for old fans to return to the fold.
  • His last years, lived by invitation in cottages in Sussex and Kent, fed and wined by beneficent admirers, provided a sort of rural coda of tranquillity.
  • A real trouper puts on the sort of show his admirers expect.
  • Nurse Jamieson had got on a favourite topic, and would have expatiated long enough, for she was a professed admirer of masculine beauty, but there was something which displeased the boy in her last simile; so he cut the conversation short, by asking whether she knew exactly how much money his grandfather had left with Dr. Gray for his maintenance. The Surgeon's Daughter
  • They may not win admirers but it does earn grudging admiration and respect. Times, Sunday Times
  • It was the custom in Europe for a great professor to be presented with a Festschrift filled with writings by his students and admirers.
  • Despite taking only one disciple, he had many admirers and touched many lives.
  • Joseph Haydn, sometime mentor and later friend and admirer, wrote, "Posterity will not see such a talent again in 100 years".
  • He cast a furtive glance around the square and, seeing that his admirer had not yet gone away, bent over his boot again.
  • NOT A LOT OF SYMPATHY FOR UMPS: Speaking of the umpires, this columnist is an unabashed admirer of many of them. Covering baseball for USATODAY.com.Torre's dilemma: Choosing No. 1 starter
  • But Clinton gained admirers in the old-mens 'club by working hard, forming cross-party allegiances, and most importantly, not stealing the spotlight from publicity hounds like her New York colleague, Democratic Sen. Chuck Schumer. Al Franken's new act opens on a serious note but should it?
  • Her admirers later had a monument placed over her grave.
  • On learning the truth, she consents to receive the visit of Lara, an admirer of hers, whom she loves; and, when the Bluebeard, Valdini, surprises his victim and proceeds to the immurement, his first wife slips in most conveniently and whisks him off, leaving Valentine free to marry Balzac
  • He performed in local cafes and clubs and drew many admirers, and his dream finally came true after a label rep witnessed one of his performances. NPR Topics: News
  • It's no secret I am one of his biggest admirers. The Sun
  • The giggle that implies that at the sight of each other's curvacious, water-slick naked bodies his admirers forgot all about him and are now busy indulging in lesbian hijinks? 13th June '06
  • She was always surrounded by a circle of admirers.
  • Not all of his admirers were fully aware of the satirical or dystopian aspects of his work, however.
  • By the end of his life he was an international celebrity and was regarded by his admirers as a kind of art guru.
  • Some of these myths they may have devised for themselves; others will have been constructed by friends and admirers. Times, Sunday Times
  • She soon won many admirers. Times, Sunday Times
  • Jennifer Lopez, in a strapless dress and an upswept hairstyle, waved from a balcony to admirers on the floor of Union Station at the Latino Inaugural Gala on Sunday night. Life of the Party: Latin Flair in Washington - The Caucus Blog - NYTimes.com
  • From the time he left Oxford he was acclaimed and backed by a small minority of passionate admirers whom I have called his fuglemen. Oscar Wilde, His Life and Confessions
  • In addition to great charm he was blessed with good looks and, consequently, had many female admirers. Times, Sunday Times
  • Wormwood Scrubs is the last place Murphy's legion of admirers would have expected him to end up, as he took second place on Smartie in the Aintree Grand National of 2001.
  • Her old adulator, also, vanished from public places, while her young admirer and his father hovered about in them as usual, but spiritless, comfortless, and as if in the same search as himself. Camilla
  • For his admirers that clear vision was reflected in his unbending refusal to consider ‘a betrayal of the great principle for which we have been fighting for the last 30 or 40 years.’
  • In 1462, Ficino decorated the Medici villa at Careggi (home to the Platonic Academy) with astrological signs,10 an ornamental scheme also found in frescoes of the Sala dei Mesi at the Palazzo Schifanoia, Ferrara (1470) ,11 and in ceilings of the Medici palace at Florence (1456), whose lapis lazuli and gold-leaf ornament offered admirers a sparkling abstraction of the starry sky. 12 We can imagine a similar heavenly apparition in the gold and sapphire ceiling of the Urbino studiolo, especially when illuminated by a setting sun or candlelight. Architecture and Memory: The Renaissance Studioli of Federico da Montefeltro
  • Her style, deportment, and immaculate grooming have clearly won her an army of admirers.
  • We told how he is regularly bombarded with demands for signed photographs from admirers. The Sun
  • There are admirers of rugged grandeur who are content merely to survey the scene from easy points of vantage.
  • It'll silence their critics, amaze their fans and win them a whole new legion of admirers.
  • Nader could once claim a legion of friends and admirers in the world of American progressive politics.
  • As an admirer of Indian culture and music, he has been deeply influenced by Indian philosophy and religion.
  • Too often sketch resemble a series of weak short stories or pub jokes, but they have their admirers. Times, Sunday Times
  • Letters and parcels from admirers are piled on the table. The Sun
  • A more unlikely admirer of melancholic English poetry would be harder to imagine. Times, Sunday Times
  • As a passionate admirer of Tolstoy and Dostoevsky he had in any case long nourished an admiration for Russia.
  • Lord High Treasurer of England, and master of the fate of Europe, that his admirers began to find out that he was really a dull puzzleheaded man. The History of England, from the Accession of James II — Volume 4
  • Admirers of Chawla paid floral tributes to her.
  • The pop star was followed by a train of admirers.
  • Deservedly, the DS has garnered a legion of admirers from every generation of drivers born since.
  • Does not this show, once and for all, that this style of singing (which still has numerous admirers) is instrumental, is unvocal, unsuited to the human voice, and should be abandoned forever? Chopin and Other Musical Essays
  • The fact that she was also winning matches helped, but her policy of letting the crowd see how pleased she was to have them on her side earned her new admirers.
  • However, his tremendous form so far this season must surely have surprised even his biggest admirers.
  • It turns out Fields was a huge admirer of hers, but their approaches to comedy, and life, were poles apart - Fields being a master of excess and West a paragon of abstemiousness.
  • His Keatsian Choral Symphony took many years to become established, and the austere bitonality of the Fugal Concerto and the Double Concerto for two violins puzzled even his admirers.
  • But first he is intent on winning some more friends and admirers in London. Times, Sunday Times
  • An admirer who was following her chased them away. Liberty: The Lives and Times of Six Women in Revolutionary France
  • The Bluebirds defender is a huge admirer of the silver screen star and has a tattoo of her face on his left hand. The Sun
  • Admirers, who are legion according to Chan, call him Little Prince ‘because he's very pretty.’
  • Delight is an understatement, but he keeps it all under perfect control, parrying a host of questions with the aplomb which has won him many admirers, including Rupert Murdoch.
  • A secret admirer leaves romantic notes in his locker and he can't even begin to guess her identity.
  • Beethoven delighted Rousseau's Romantic admirers with his demonstration of the moral force expressible in music.
  • They may not win admirers but it does earn grudging admiration and respect. Times, Sunday Times
  • Though the room was crowded with people when the bailiff entered, not one of them had compassion enough to mollify my prosecutrix, far less to pay the debt; they even laughed at my tears, and one of them bade me be of good cheer, for I should not want admirers in The Adventures of Roderick Random
  • Spontaneity, with a touch of impulsiveness, is one of the traits that attract some of McCain’s admirers. August « 2008 « Niqnaq
  • Evidently, her relationship with Nick didn't earn her a legion of admirers.
  • Her admirers were fewer, and fatter, and less ardent.
  • The funeral was attended by the singer's friends and admirers.
  • You have a wide circle of devoted buddies and admirers, and you take vicarious pleasure in their successes and accomplishments while inspiring your friends with your own passion for life.
  • Among the visitors at the chateau was the Baron de Saint Foix, an old friend of the Count, and his son, the Chevalier St. Foix, a sensible and amiable young man, who, having in the preceding year seen the Lady Blanche, at Paris, had become her declared admirer. The Mysteries of Udolpho
  • If all the admirers of these two books would but bestir themselves and look into the matter, I am sure that Sterne’s only too clever assault would be relegated to its proper place and assessed at its right value as a mere boutade. Travels through France and Italy
  • Of all her admirers the most permanent was Sir John.
  • Perhaps the flowers were sent by a secret admirer!
  • It was a nice gesture and it makes me wonder if I have a secret admirer.
  • Lockhart DOESrock! and Has anyone apprehend the admirer account bye. lockhart? doesanyone apperceive if it's 1st person, 3rd person, all-seeing or 3rd being omniscient. E. Lockhart's Blog:
  • Her champion seems evidently her admirer, and his father her adorer. Camilla
  • But every gallerygoer has sometimes found their attention drifting from a stunning artwork to an equally stunning fellow admirer. Times, Sunday Times
  • Afterwards he spent five minutes with the President of whom he is an unashamed admirer.
  • Among the exceptions is an elegant dark wooden chest of drawers from Hitler's chancellery, filigreed with hundreds of swastika forms, which has been hung at a diagonal angle on a corner wall, and is further protected from possible Hitler admirers by a thin gauze panel. Germany's first Hitler exhibition opens in nervous Berlin museum
  • She, however, added that president Obama was a huge admirer of Mahatma Gandhi, and that there could be some kind of Gandhian programme during the president's visit. Daily News & Analysis
  • Labels and inscriptions on things manufactured in preindustrial eras often give voice to the objects they adorn, as if bringing them to life, to speak directly or forthrightly to their admirers or potential owners. The English Is Coming!
  • Furthermore, some crazy admirers aswe the acceptance and aswell added manifolds. Think Progress » GOP Rep. John Fleming On Doctor Saying He Will Refuse Care To Obama Voters: ‘I Applaud What He Said And Did’
  • There were two large bouquets and a bundle of letters tied with pale blue ribbon, presumably from stage-door admirers.
  • The Poems of the mourner himself have now passed through innumerable editions, and are universally known, but if, when Collins died, the same kind of imprecation had been pronounced by a surviving admirer, small is the number whom it would not have comprehended. Prefaces and Prologues to Famous Books with Introductions, Notes and Illustrations
  • The first English translation to get into print was by William Tyndale, an admirer of Luther.
  • A ring of admirers had already formed around their table, and Nyrouya thinned her lips disapprovingly at those bystanders.
  • Donie never wanted for company; he had a legion of friends and admirers.
  • Even as the mystic poet is dying, some of his followers and admirers have begun to quarrel over what to do with his mortal remains.
  • An admirer had given Adams an ivory cane, inscribed with a line from Horace Justum et tenacem propositi virum —“the just and steady-purposed man” and the motto, “Right of Petition Triumphant.” America's First Dynasty
  • She lived on the top two floors and entertained a variety of friends and admirers. Times, Sunday Times
  • One wishes one of her many friends and admirers had advised her not to make her autobiography sound like a list of testimonials from famous people interspersed with anecdotes.
  • I am a huge admirer of his work. Times, Sunday Times
  • Although suspicious of unknown admirers, Tennyson was a sociable man, with a fondness for declaiming his work to a respectful audience.
  • There are admirers of rugged grandeur who are content merely to survey the scene from easy points of vantage.
  • I hope I'm not around to see it but if I am - too gaga to know what's happening - put me in with the admirers of deeply flawed dreamers.
  • This is an essential purchase for any admirer of Barbirolli.
  • In BBC hospital drama Casualty, Clive played consultant Mike Barratt, whose combination of beefy good looks and softly-spoken bedside manner won him a legion of admirers.
  • His reputation is embalmed, still, in the romantic notions inflicted upon it by his early, maudlin admirers.
  • Along the way, Purdy drew emulators and admirers from several generations of writers.
  • She had to share the final months with his many friends and political admirers. Times, Sunday Times
  • Lana : Either an admirer or a psychopath, depending on who you ask.
  • The apagogic mode of proof is the true source of those illusions which have always had so strong an attraction for the admirers of dogmatical philosophy. The Critique of Pure Reason
  • Golf had fewer admirers than had the other sport, but what there were were fully as enthusiastic, and the coming tournament was discussed until Joel's head whirled with such apparently outlandish terms as "Bogey," "baffy, The Half-Back
  • I was an ardent admirer and supporter of MacBrayne's buses: they opened up the north-west for me.
  • she had many admirers
  • The South that she wrote about — the South of snuff-dipping poor whites, evasively sweet-talking Negroes, and sunken-eyed back woods prophets — was undergoing a dizzying transformation even as she (a contemporary and qualified admirer of Martin Luther King, Jr.) was writing about it on an electric typewriter. Flannery O'Connor's Gifts
  • Far better than those fusty old democracies, mutter the admirers. Times, Sunday Times
  • She never married but had many admirers.
  • Then one day Nichole found a note in her locker from a secret admirer.
  • What we do know is that she has a formidable mind, powerful admirers and a yellow plastic digger on her desk.
  • She wanted to see if she had gotten another e-mail from her secret admirer.
  • At times their flowing, passing, attacking football style was almost mesmeric, and Mowbray and his crew brought long-starved fans back to Easter Road and won many new admirers.
  • Sandy, Sam and Westlake ramparted Mormon from enthusiastic admirers and pushed down to the creek where he washed his hurts with the stinging icy water and stiffly put on his clothes. Rimrock Trail
  • Labels and inscriptions on things manufactured in preindustrial eras often give voice to the objects they adorn, as if bringing them to life, to speak directly or forthrightly to their admirers or potential owners. The English Is Coming!
  • He's picked up items ranging from a cloth mailbag to a fire extinguisher to an old newspaper, all in the interest of giving admirers a clearer picture of what life was like in the early 1940s.
  • Agnes, a devoted admirer of nature, was in an ecstasy which she could not conceal, as one beautiful view succeeded another during their sail up the lake; but the other ladies were so much occupied in trying the effect of _art_, that they had no eye for the beauties of _nature_. Lewie Or, The Bended Twig
  • Not short of male admirers, she sees the irony of her situation.
  • I must make this my project of the decade which should win over a legion of admirers and also the top accolades of the industry.
  • One is sure to become his ardent admirer for his humility, his performance and his good manners.
  • A small boy approached him later and there was Richard, pen poised, ready to sign an autograph for this admirer.
  • She might have used the word improperly, and meant ‘admirer’ all the time. A Pair of Blue Eyes
  • How he took, as his vice president, a Machiavellian monster, and responded -- like LBJ after the Gulf of Tonkin -- with what can only be called the grossest stupidity -- thereby granting Osama bin Laden all he could ever have dreamed of in mounting his 9/ll horror -- is a chapter that was sad for an admirer of the American presidency to have to write. The Full Feed from HuffingtonPost.com
  • Posing as an unrequited admirer of the daughter, Pattie, Martin insinuates his way into the Bates' home.
  • It's not for nothing that this laureate of embarrassment is an ardent admirer of Kafka.
  • Or did the author send the manuscript or advance copies to select friends and admirers with a request for some publicity?
  • The tours were a phenomenal success and recruited generations of new admirers. Times, Sunday Times
  • He was also a great admirer of the weapon: The M60 was a real workhorse.
  • Everywhere they went they were feted by admirers.
  • In the TMZ interview Sheen discoursed widely on a number of subjects, including his ability to cure himself from addiction, his views on parenthood, playing baseball and his efforts to house a group of porn stars nearby – "Some plans just don't work out," Sheen said – while surrounded by a group of his friends and admirers known as "Camp Charlie". Charlie Sheen interview: 'You can't process me with a normal brain'
  • Angel has been getting emails from an unknown guy who claims he is her secret admirer.
  • They may not win admirers but it does earn grudging admiration and respect. Times, Sunday Times
  • Angel has been getting emails from an unknown guy who claims is her secret admirer.
  • We told how he is regularly bombarded with demands for signed photographs from admirers. The Sun
  • I got an e-card from a secret admirer, who thinks I'm cute!
  • Listening and perhaps asking questions are the primary ways of experiencing the work, which one admirer has characterized as "nonvisual abstraction. NYT > Home Page
  • Match-makers Jane Gledhill and Chris Cunningham had hoped to be swamped with single people wanting to be paired off - but their romantic speed-dating notion has had so few admirers that they have had to call the whole thing off.
  • As is the case for many nonagenarians, Ken Clark is experiencing age-related difficulties and is not in the best of health, but on behalf of his many colleagues, admirers and friends, I wish him the best.
  • It always cracks me up when the pathetic, lovestruck Sarah Palin admirers go on about how we hate her because we are afraid of Miss Wasilla. Think Progress » Palin Admits To Travelling To Canada For Health Care
  • But that doesn't mean that, amid the swooning of his unquestioning admirers, the point should not be kept in mind.
  • I sat at your table, he reminded the actress, who looked a little put out when he approached her as she fended off admirers in the predictably rococo drawing room of the French Embassy, where the most discriminating after-party was under way. O: A Presidential Novel
  • Both bands are hugely influential, with legions of fans and admirers willing them on. Times, Sunday Times
  • He is a decent man who retains many admirers. Times, Sunday Times
  • Arab dreams: Qaddafi (left) spent his youth as a fervent admirer of Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser, the pan-Arab nationalist icon of the era.
  • Edith Wharton, a great admirer and friend of Henry James, was a likely candidate to edit the letters, but Alice thought her pushy and her novels too risqué to have her name associated with the James family. The Afterlife of the Lion
  • Musetta, looking like an overdressed silent-movie vamp, drives up with her ancient admirer in a sputtering antique automobile.
  • While his film songs drive some admirers nuts, that genre is no big deal for him.
  • He has a host of admirers in the sport who recognise his focus, athleticism and technical ability. Times, Sunday Times
  • The Stoke City boss has admitted to being an admirer of both, but Hit F5 or the auto-update thingummybob for the latest posts. WN.com - Articles related to Isla Fisher, Tom Wilkinson to star in new Simon Pegg comedy 'Burke and Hare'
  • He is a great admirer of your prize poem and of Dr. Spencer. The Daisy Chain
  • We hope to interest admirers of the genre and hope we do not disappoint their expectations.
  • Perhaps the flowers were sent by a secret admirer!
  • I'm not the kind of girl who inspires random bouquets and secret admirers.
  • But when his love was not reciprocated he turned from admirer to stalker, Harrogate magistrates were told.
  • But the worshippers and admirers of these gods delight in imitating their scandalous iniquities, and are nowise concerned that the republic be less depraved and licentious.
  • The word fan is most simply defined as, an enthusiastic admirer. Pastor Kyle Idleman: Why I'm Not A 'Fan' Of Jesus
  • What took their place was not the masterwork of Mies Van der Rohe, but the ‘banal commercial buildings’ of lesser emulators and admirers.
  • He went so far as to write his autobiography in the third person and in Welsh - a language few of his admirers could read.
  • This argument has been echoed by admirers of a pre-release version of the film.
  • There was a little cluster of admirers round the guest speaker.
  • Healthy ambition is a fine quality, but winning at all costs can alienate even the most devoted admirers.
  • Merciless, cruel, and unforgiving," wrote Angela Carter a more obvious admirer in her 1982 preface to this edition: "Stead has a rare capacity to flay the reader's sensibilities. The Man Who Loved Children – review
  • This incident evoked uncommon anger in Spinoza, who was an admirer of de Witt and the republican ideals for which he stood. Spinoza's Political Philosophy
  • Unfortunately it is only a matter of time before one of her admirers who is even loonier than she is, runs with one of her “talking points” and causes serious physical damage to the object (s) of her ire. Think Progress » American Family Association: Government is more dangerous than al Qaeda, Tim McVeigh’s terrorism.
  • Vidocq may not, as his admirers claim, have invented fingerprinting and the science of ballistics, but he did show the importance of keeping detailed criminal records.
  • The tape recording purports to be of a conversation between the princess and a secret admirer.
  • Beethoven delighted Rousseau's Romantic admirers with his demonstration of the moral force expressible in music.
  • Though married in haste they did not wait for leisure before they repented, but commenced quarrelling at once, until _Esmé_, in order to test his love and that of an admirer who was helping to complicate matters, "bobbed" her hair and threw the severed tresses at her husband. Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 156, March 12, 1919
  • she behaves rather heartlessly toward her admirers
  • This new film will please his legions of admirers.
  • Soon the admirers tossed all sense of aloofness to the prevailing winds and called themselves "fans," a phrase complementing their childish enthusiasm. An East Wind Coming
  • Letters and parcels from admirers are piled on the table. The Sun
  • His list of friends and admirers there is legion.
  • They were mutual admirers of each other's work and had wanted to record together for some time.
  • Among writers in the North Ibsen began to hold very much the position that Whistler was taking among painters and etchers in this country, that is to say the abuse and ridicule of his works by a dwindling group of elderly conventional critics merely stung into more frenzied laudation an ever-widening circle of youthful admirers. Henrik Ibsen
  • This week he is exhibiting in Dubai, in the Grand Gallery at the Royal Mirage One&Only - brightly realistic about the economic slump an elegant acrylic-on-canvas 'Stallion after Delacroix' is not immune from recessionary angst, but hopeful that his local admirers, even if their oil money is not what it was, will see his 2008 credit-crunched prices as a buying opportunity. Comment
  • Haters are confused admirers who can’t understand why everybody else likes you. Paulo Coelho 
  • Mrs. Brownlow had ever been a great admirer of the young Squire, and did not admire him less now that he had come to his squireship. Ralph the Heir
  • It is hardly surprising that his natural politeness won him friends and admirers across the political divide. Times, Sunday Times
  • Metheny's jazz fans will adore this, but all his other admirers will raise an eyebrow too.
  • His fame grew as much from the enthusiasm of his admirers as from his own efforts.
  • Joseph Haydn, sometime mentor and later friend and admirer, wrote, "Posterity will not see such a talent again in 100 years".
  • It has been a good year for latter-day admirers of Oliver Cromwell, the only successful antimonarchist in English history. The Monarchy Will Prevail
  • Female admirers showered Joe with a variety of panties, thongs and even a pair of bloomers and a bra as he belted out a succession of instantly recognisable Dolan chart-toppers spanning - would you believe - four decades.
  • Milton, genuine admirer of Hebrew learning though he was and a man not averse to using "Christian talmudic" arguments of his own when occasion required, permits himself one or two uncomplimentary references to the "insulse rules" of the Talmud. VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol V No 3
  • The 22-year-old found a different way to honor the slain Beatle in the bustling crowd of admirers: He sat alone on a bench with earphones on, listening to Lennon's music on his iPod while reading his book "Skywriting By Word of Mouth. John Lennon's 70th Celebrated In Central Park
  • The next day, Sierra watched her sister get ready to meet her secret admirer.
  • He says Magic Johnson was in one of his places the other night, surrounded by admirers.
  • Or maybe it was just some sardonic concoction made by my real secret admirer!
  • The tape recording purports to be of a conversation between the princess and a secret admirer.

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