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glamor

[ US /ˈɡɫæmɝ/ ]
NOUN
  1. alluring beauty or charm (often with sex-appeal)

How To Use glamor In A Sentence

  • In the tome, full of glamorous soft-focus pictures of the footballer, he waxes lyrical about the art of seduction, with fish his favourite weapon for luring girlfriends from the dining room to the boudoir.
  • Instead, the headquarters are situated in a squat, brick building which seems rather unglamorous for the world of radio.
  • The advertisements depict smoking as glamorous and attractive.
  • Their romantic interplay is glamorized to its maximum expression.
  • Viv was British rugby's pre-eminent full-back through the 1930s, last line and top dog for Wales and the Lions, an Oxford double blue, a Glamorgan cricketer and, conspicuously, the first full-back ever to score a try in a Five Nations match – against Ireland in 1934. Tons of reasons to support the monarchs of sport | Frank Keating
  • Testing the new bike in the dizzying mountains north of glamorous Monaco, all of these improvements came together beautifully. The Sun
  • In theory, this could be a smart strategic move but it is likely to "domesticate" Julian Assange; running such an NGO would require too many boring meetings with potential funders many of whom have already been alienated by the organisation and a nine-to-five office routine - the exact opposite of the glamorous nomadic lifestyle that the founder of WikiLeaks has become famous for. The Guardian World News
  • An egomaniacal celebrity author lives in Paris with his glamorous young second wife and his shy and unhappy grown-up daughter from his first marriage.
  • The days of playing unglamorous locations like the South Morang Hotel are all over.
  • It was hard to believe Lana had once thought of her as glamorous, even an adventuress.
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