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[ US /ˈpɹɑstəˌtut/ ]
[ UK /pɹˈɒstɪtjˌuːt/ ]
VERB
  1. sell one's body; exchange sex for money
NOUN
  1. a woman who engages in sexual intercourse for money

How To Use prostitute In A Sentence

  • One last prediction the model makes is that the income differential paid to prostitutes will rise with the status the culture accords wives.
  • Those few women who shocked public feeling with a display of sexual desire were branded either as prostitutes, nymphomaniacs or lunatics.
  • It was not until 1985 that the law penalized the client for kerb-crawling, even though for many years it had penalized prostitutes for soliciting in the street.
  • A prostitute was soliciting on the street.
  • Of these options hiring a prostitute is the least threatening to marriage but it's the only option which is illegal. Archive 2008-03-01
  • Beginning in sixteenth-century England, a distinct criminal culture of rogues, vagabonds, cutpurses, and prostitutes emerged and flourished.
  • By day, watch your step, obey the rules or they may call you castrater, bitch, slob, pig, cow, slut whore prostitute chippy tramp. The Women’s Room
  • Some critics say he prostituted his musical skills by going into pop rather than staying with classical music.
  • Her mother, Jackiey, the daughter of a market trader, was described in her daughter's autobiography as a petty thief and "clipper" - a woman who pretends to be a prostitute but runs off with the money instead. DUFF & NONSENSE!
  • Likewise Deut. 23: 17-18 must be pruned from the list, since it most likely refers to a heterosexual prostitute involved in Canaanite fertility rites that have infiltrated Jewish worship; the King James Version inaccurately labeled him a "sodomite. Homosexuality And The Bible
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