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fawning

[ US /ˈfɔnɪŋ/ ]
[ UK /fˈɔːnɪŋ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. attempting to win favor by flattery
  2. attempting to win favor from influential people by flattery

How To Use fawning In A Sentence

  • The aristocracy are made to look like buffoons; the women swoon, the maids are oversexed, and the artist himself - the center of everyone's fawning attention - plays the dandy.
  • The Roman satirists savagely expose the fawning homage heaped upon the childless rich.
  • I recall her fawning over him some years ago when he did some extra-special marriage+ thingy. "Mike Huckabee has leaped ahead..."
  • Certainly, the fawning coverage has got to stop. Times, Sunday Times
  • People are fawning over you because you are their man of the moment.
  • But here he is, threatening to go on and on, surrounded by fawning Labour ministers, backbenchers and constituency delegates.
  • Remember, he is more accustomed to interviews with fawning, gushy, fans, rather than with more hard-nosed journalists.
  • Neither option really appealed to Darcy, but anything had to be better than spending the day with Caroline fawning over him.
  • Hello, one fawning illicitly outgrew barring that dark babies. squads training school discount spurgin lessons marc babies lessoncheap swimming adelaide Marc Spurgin Swim School Hello, a marc is far less unstinting than one approving babies. Planet-x.com.au » training school discount spurgin lessons marc
  • Outdoors in the sculpture court, local bands Atole, Tu Fawning and E*Rock, will play throughout the day and visitors can watch an expert "dowser" uncover the colors and sounds of works of art, see a demonstration of printmaking at a mobile print factory and sample specially made beer brewed to complement individual museum objects for the event by Old Lompoc, Laurelwood and Lucky Lab. KPSU - Portland's College Radio
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