How To Use Sluttish In A Sentence

  • They lived sluttishly in poor houses, where they eat a great deal of beef and mutton, and drank good ale in a brown mazard; and their very kings were but a sort of farmers. Miscellanies Upon Various Subjects
  • This will put the last nail in the coffin of marriage as an institution and result in a semi-permanent Brave New World scenario of enforced, female, sluttish promiscuity, a climate of coupling with anyone and separating the act from the notion of love [political correctness] and the coming backlash
  • Sir William Brereton, a Cheshire gentleman and Puritan visiting in 1636, called the common people sluttish, nasty and slothful.
  • One East German newspaper argued that Gladow was shaped by “the sluttish kitchen of American gangster movies, of crime stories, of murder and other sensational trials, to whose influence he succumbed.” A Renegade History of the United States
  • Am I too sluttish? She thinks quickly. But her movement is faster than it.
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  • chapelle," seek for admission at the establishment of mother S---, who, after employing them for a time in various menial offices, and making them pluck off their eyebrows hair by hair, generally dismisses them on the plea of sluttishness; whereupon they return to their papas to eat the bread of the country, with the comfortable prospect of eating it still in the shape of a pension after their sires are dead. The Romany Rye
  • And the moderation they so often preach is to “protect us” from molestation or sluttish reputations, asking the victim to change rather than speak out against the perpetrators. THREATENING WOMEN WITH UNATTRACTIVENESS FOR A GOOD CAUSE » Sociological Images
  • Then I think of Elizabeth Woodville waiting for the King of England under an oak tree, as if she just happened to be by the roadside, a hedge witch casting her spells, and I think that my way at least is an honorable offer and not a begging for an amorous glance and a sluttish strutting of her well-worn wares. The Red Queen
  • This will put the last nail in the coffin of marriage as an institution and result in a semi-permanent Brave New World scenario of enforced, female, sluttish promiscuity, a climate of coupling with anyone and separating the act from the notion of love, with in-vitro procreation reserved for state-controlled ‘hatcheries’. [political correctness] and the coming backlash
  • Ultimately, however, the poet objects far less to her supposedly natural feminine sluttishness than to her apparently unnatural intellectual pursuits: ‘Women grown intellectual grow dull, / And lose the mother wit of natural trull’.
  • It would have been quite sluttish to come back firing like a bunch of hard rockers. Chuck Klosterman on Rock
  • One the one hand you have an obese, disgusting pot calling the sluttish, horrid kettle black. Rosanne Barr Lashes Out At Madonna (but falls short of eating her)
  • Yet, with all this, there was about the inmates, Luckie Mucklebackit and her family, an appearance of ease, plenty, and comfort, that seemed to warrant their old sluttish proverb, "The clartier the cosier. The Antiquary — Complete
  • Yet, with all this, there was about the inmates, Luckie Mucklebackit and her family, an appearance of ease, plenty, and comfort, that seemed to warrant their old sluttish proverb, “The clartier the cosier.” The Antiquary
  • The first to be showcased is T, a sluttish, teenaged Laguna Beeoch with a taste for pot and tong underwear. Jake Arky: Flee To Canadian TV
  • Old English cwene, akin to the etymon of queen]. rig [Middle English riggen, of uncertain derivation] dialectal English; cf. riggish ` sluttish, 'as in Shakespeare's Antony and Cleopatra, where Enobarbus speaks thus of Cleopatra: VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol VIII No 3
  • He described her as attractive in a sluttish kind of way.
  • Luckie Mucklebackit and her family, an appearance of ease, plenty, and comfort, that seemed to warrant their old sluttish proverb, ` ` The clartier the cosier. ' The Antiquary
  • The sluttish,drunken and loutish way women behave in Britain was a shock to me when I first came here. [cry rape] sorting out the truth from the lies

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