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[ US /bɪˈɫəvd, bɪˈɫəvəd/ ]
NOUN
  1. a beloved person; used as terms of endearment
ADJECTIVE
  1. dearly loved

How To Use beloved In A Sentence

  • A few days after, they brought the intelligence that Barbarina had returned; and the councillor dwelt with her in her new house; and the servants were commanded to call the signora Madame Cocceji. as she was his well-beloved and trusted wife. Berlin and Sans-Souci; or Frederick the Great and his friends
  • 12: 19: "Not defending [Douay: 'revenging'] yourselves, my dearly beloved. Summa Theologica, Part II-II (Secunda Secundae) Translated by Fathers of the English Dominican Province
  • The other cheese beloved in Savoie, the smelly, oozing reblochon, is the star of a Savoyard specialty: the famous tartiflette. Savoie the Fair
  • There's no insight into Alexander's transition from beloved leader to drunken megalomaniac; one minute he has his subjects hanging on his every word, and then next thing you know he's declaring himself a god.
  • From the outset, we get the kind of writing beloved of a certain kind of creative writing teacher: the kind you can pluck out and quote admiringly.
  • A hard-nosed unmoveable man, who sacrifices his lovely daughter to ward off future kidnap threats on his beloved son.
  • Forte is a very popular figure in city government, seemingly beloved by every local politician in sight.
  • In 1883, he published Treasure Island, a much beloved children's classic.
  • It might seem meshuga to stage a beloved musical in a language that most of the audience won't understand.
  • She put on a shawl and told Denver and Beloved to do likewise.
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