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seducer

[ UK /sɪdjˈuːsɐ/ ]
[ US /sɪˈdusɝ/ ]
NOUN
  1. a bad person who entices others into error or wrongdoing
  2. a man who takes advantage of women

How To Use seducer In A Sentence

  • One of the nastiest is the way in which male honour is seen as bound up with female behaviour so that any supposed compromise or scandal in what happens to women, even becoming a rape victim, justifies violence against them as well as against their abusers or seducers; hence the 'honour killings' of young girls that disfigure some societies even today. Temple Address: "Becoming Trustworthy: Respect and Self-Respect" Church House
  • What must increase the poignancy of his feelings upon the occasion remains to be stated -- that the seducer was his intimate friend, a young man, whom he had raised into notice in public life, and whom he had, with all that warmth and confidence of heart for which he is remarkable, introduced into his house, and trusted with his beloved wife. Tales and Novels — Volume 05
  • Victorian critics derided the advertisers as wicked seducers, but the ads were a favorite among readers.
  • How can one tell the dancer from the dance, the seducer from the seduced?
  • The remake of Casino Royale, the first Bond novel, will concentrate instead on the character of the spy, painted by Ian Fleming in the book as a suave, coldly aggressive seducer.
  • The depiction of her as temptress echoes the clerical trope of woman as Eve, the seducer of men.
  • The first aim of the Bolshevist seducer and sly talker is to make you doubt God.
  • This memoir resembles a bedroom farce with the cheerful seducer rushing from tryst to tryst.
  • He does not know that Harry is the would-be seducer of his seamstress daughter.
  • So this is how it was done, she reflected, and the word seducer flashed across her mind. The Scandal of the Season
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