crooner

[ UK /kɹˈuːnɐ/ ]
[ US /ˈkɹunɝ/ ]
NOUN
  1. a singer of popular ballads
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How To Use crooner In A Sentence

  • He is billed for a performance at Club Amaruzu in Queens, New York on October 24 alongside veteran reggae crooner Coco Tea and dancehall star Capleton.
  • Curly-haired crooner Harry can be seen bundled up in a black jacket and a pair of ski goggles as he holds his skis over his shoulder.
  • There were singing people on the bus, crooners in backyards and I even hummed a note or two.
  • You get it all here - Iggy the crooner, Iggy the growler, Iggy the philosopher and Iggy the rager, raging against the dying of the night where the street fight that is rock mocks the slippery stranglehold of the recording industry.
  • The 30-year old crooner was the oldest contestant in the sixth and last heat of the competition.
  • NAT King Cole was a prodigious artist with parallel careers: as a great jazz pianist who cut some beautiful sides with heavyweights such as Lester Young, and as a crooner with a voice like soft petals.
  • The “My Heart Will Go On” crooner is expecting twins later this year. Celine Dion Pregnant
  • A face-lift crooner in white, a cruise-liner cabaret star, he was appearing one night only with Rita Farina and her brother Fabrice. WHITE LIES
  • In these pieces, written in large part by Kurtzman with Jaffee and Roth usually writing their own pieces, it's not enough that you remember singer Perry Como -- you have to remember when he was young and known as a slouchy mumbler, an affront to the more polished type of crooner like Bing Crosby. The ADD Blog at Comic Book Galaxy
  • Nudity and ribaldry have been a staple of Las Vegas entertainment since Siegel's day, the bosomy chorus girls parading behind the comics and crooners.
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