Get Free Checker
[ UK /kˈɔːtɪzən/ ]
NOUN
  1. a woman who cohabits with an important man

How To Use courtesan In A Sentence

  • Nobody in Japan would dream of confusing top Gion geisha with high - class courtesans, let alone prostitutes, the myth that continues to prevail about geisha in the West.
  • The greatest danger in becoming a courtesan was the risk that her choice might damage Geoffrey, since to leave him behind was entirely out of the question. Dearly Beloved
  • A courtesan is a mistress of a man of wealth or nobility. Essential Guide to Business Style and Usage
  • So a quick Google search on "sprezzatura" leads me to a Wiki page on a Renaissance work about a courtesan's ability to hide or mask what she truly feels. KEXP 90.3 Blog
  • In a certain _catalogo_ of the prices of Venetian courtesans Studies in the Psychology of Sex, Volume 6 Sex in Relation to Society
  • The lunette to the left in the chapel, located above the marble sarcophagus with an effigy carved in the likeness of the deceased courtesan reclining on top, shows Mary Magdalen Borne Up by Angels.
  • She is not a realistic prostitute, but a courtesan, a prominent figure in Indian literature.
  • So here we are in the early 1760s. Sade is in Paris, newly wed and living the life of an average 18th century gadabout, partying with countless courtesans, opera girls and prostitutes.
  • It was common practice for a gentleman to make a financial commitment to an actress or a courtesan he wanted to keep.
  • For all her earthiness—Camilla still loved to “muck around” the gardens at Highgrove in her mud-caked Wellingtons—the Duchess of Cornwall had proven herself a skilled courtesan who, for obvious reasons, viewed other women warily. William and Kate
View all