werewolf

[ UK /wˈe‍əwʊlf/ ]
[ US /ˈwɛɹˌwʊɫf/ ]
NOUN
  1. a monster able to change appearance from human to wolf and back again
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How To Use werewolf In A Sentence

  • In short, she has stumbled into a werewolf movie. Times, Sunday Times
  • ‘It's fine,’ the werewolf stated with such finality that it left no room for argument.
  • Harrison's new collection, "The Farmer's Daughter" - a title redolent of Merle Haggard or off-color barroom jokes or both, depending on your referents - contains three stories that feature, among their sprawling casts, several lusty adolescent boys (including one with a clubfoot and one who's a werewolf); an aged rancher, who, at 73, on his "last conscious day" of life, gingerly gropes a NYT > Home Page
  • The werewolf could be a benign individual, trapped within a bestial frame.
  • The grass had both footprints of the boy and werewolf but the werewolf was out of sight.
  • That's because the sevenyear-old has congenital hypertrichosis - commonly known as werewolf syndrome. The Sun
  • Well, a werewolf bit them and yeah, lycanthropy is passed on through bites.
  • Building on the basis of both truth and legend, Universal added the lycanthrope to their pantheon of monster characters way back in 1913 with the silent film, The Werewolf.
  • Like a werewolf that had put its foot in a gin trap. Times, Sunday Times
  • The werewolf shows that either humans can temporarily lose conscience and become animal or that bestial wildness is part of conscience itself.
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