gold digger

NOUN
  1. a woman who associates with or marries a rich man in order to get valuables from him through gifts or a divorce settlement
  2. a miner who digs or pans for gold in a gold field
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How To Use gold digger In A Sentence

  • a scheming gold digger
  • She knew there was no money left so it wasn't a case of her being a gold digger. The Sun
  • This woman is not a gold digger. The Sun
  • In Saul Bellow's "Humboldt's Gift," the narrator describes himself as an "idiotic old lecher" who is "leaving two children to follow an obvious gold digger to corrupt Europe. Bringing Up Baby? Definitely
  • He opened a general store in Union St, selling groceries and supplies to the gold diggers.
  • Gold diggers need to play it cool. Times, Sunday Times
  • Greene thinks he can prove it, and he's not simply going to describe you to the jury as a gold digger. WILD JUSTICE
  • But the 30-year-old beautician insists she is no gold digger. The Sun
  • Of course there are still sugar daddies and gold diggers still practising the old ways, but nowhere near as many as when the married tax allowance was the main reason to wed.
  • With the increase in gold prices has come the rise of the new gold digger. Times, Sunday Times
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