[
US
/ˈkəˈmɑn/
]
NOUN
- anything that serves as an enticement
- qualities that attract by seeming to promise some kind of reward
How To Use come-on In A Sentence
- Florence puts on her client clothes, does sexy come-on routines for him, fakes orgasmic pleasure, sticks to the rules.
- A potent feminine signifier, bustles exaggerate and prettify the rear without offering a conspicuous come-on.
- Will women respond to the Republicans' simplistic come-on?
- He ignores come-ons from the many women who seem to find him attractive.
- Others want to keep him in action where he is, a historical fact and tourist come-on.
- She was definitely giving him the come-on .
- He could re-edit the film, shoot additional scenes, design his own ad campaign, and create any kind of come-on.
- Far from the swagger of a cowboy, Iraq shows the Bush Administration's come-on to be the whimper of a true coward, the pathetic act of a weakling who knows it can only dominate the puniest member of the pack. Andrew Foster Altschul: October 9-13 Is National Republican Predator Week
- John nodded and made a come-on gesture with his other hand. T2: INFILTRATOR
- If you view competition as bad for consumers, you can't have a very sanguine view of their ability to resist corporate come-ons.