[
UK
/kəkˈɛt/
]
NOUN
- a seductive woman who uses her sex appeal to exploit men
VERB
-
talk or behave amorously, without serious intentions
My husband never flirts with other women
The guys always try to chat up the new secretaries
How To Use coquette In A Sentence
- Coquette gets a preview of the new RACHEL Rachel Roy collection at Macy's with Rachel herself! ShowHype - Top Entertainment News, Videos, and Blogs
- The youth had turned from waif to coquette in the space of one night. EVERVILLE
- “I HAVE been insincere — if you will have the word — I mean I HAVE coquetted, and do NOT love him!” The Woodlanders
- I have been called a coquette, my prince; it is time to bind myself in marriage bonds, and show the world that love can make an honest woman of me. Frederick the Great and His Family
- Her smooth, pink-and-white cheeks and unwinking eyes contrasted vividly with his seamed yellowness and blinking grin; for a long time he coquetted at her, and played peep-bo, without disturbing her gravity, making humorous side comments to the on-lookers meanwhile. Hawthorne and His Circle
- Not a kitten, not a coquette, but she could, it seemed, when the mood was on her, be a temptress of a different sort. THE PERFECT LOVER
- Mary, who had always been a little coquette and didn't change her ways despite the fact that she was to be married, talked gaily with all the earnest men surrounding her, although they'd been warned against pursuing anything.
- Thus, my dear, coquettes of your fascinating sex cover their persons with figgery, fantastically arranged, and call their masquerading, modesty. The Second Funeral of Napoleon
- When dressed as women, they painted their faces, chirruped with their lips, and coquetted.
- Nice person, actually a "coquette" is a flirt and a person's dress or weight really doesn't affect a person's staus as a coquette. In which I impress the Americans by ordering animal parts they would prefer I didn’t translate