How To Use Wooer In A Sentence

  • These days we have heard of similar heroic undertakings by resolute wooers.
  • A wooer should open his ears more than his eyes. 
  • A maiden with many wooers often chooses the worst. 
  • Ever the wooer, George Clooney typifies the Hollywood bachelor that will pretty much make any woman melt. CNN Transcript Jan 1, 2010
  • You must act be a wooer, and not expect the board simply to warm up to you right away. Advice To A New CEO: How To Handle Your Board
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  • NOW Cyllenian Hermes called forth from the halls the souls of the wooers, and he held in his hand his wand that is fair and golden, wherewith he lulls the eyes of men, of whomso he will, while others again he even wakens out of sleep. Book XXIV
  • A wooer should open his ears more than his eyes. 
  • There are few wooers in bird-life so ardent as the pinnated grouse, yet he that joins in the mating ceremony of booming morning after morning on some chosen booming-ground or fiercely contests with other males for the favor of the chosen one deserts her soon after the winning. Ohio Arbor Day 1913: Arbor and Bird Day Manual Issued for the Benefit of the Schools of our State
  • how silly an ardent and unsuccessful wooer can be especially if he is getting on in years
  • A maiden with many wooers often chooses the worst. 
  • One quickly gets the sense of a heart breaking, heart broken, and relentless wooer of women. The Twitterer: Lemon Hound talks to Arjun Basu
  • It helped her get into a fancy boarding school, for instance, but it also attracted superficial wooers looking for the ultimate status accessory.
  • “Aweel, Tibb, a lass like me wasna to lack wooers, for I wasna sae ill-favoured that the tikes wad bark after me.” The Monastery
  • But wait until you hear the gorgeous "Some Enchanted Evening" and "This Nearly Was Mine" as sung by bass-baritone David Pittsinger, who portrays Emile de Becque, the smooth French wooer of the cockeyed American optimist, Ensign Nellie Forbush. Smooth sailing
  • A wooer should open his ears more than his eyes. 
  • She has been immortalized by the author for she is no ordinary vamp but one who is not only a subtle wooer but a patient psychologist.
  • I came out of a theater, where I used to spend every evening in the proscenium boxes in the role of an ardent wooer.
  • The wooer was a Mr. Child, son of a brewer at Abingdon, to whom the lady sent a challenge. Character Sketches of Romance, Fiction and the Drama, Vol. 1 A Revised American Edition of the Reader's Handbook
  • And godlike Telemachus was far the first to descry her, for he was sitting with a heavy heart among the wooers dreaming on his good father, if haply he might come somewhence, and make a scattering of the wooers there throughout the palace, and himself get honour and bear rule among his own possessions. Book I
  • The fellow went to the butcher's and bought seven or eight sheep's eyes; and when this lusty wooer did sit at dinner, he would cast in her face a sheep's eye, saying, "How dost thou, my pretty pigsnie? The Book of Noodles Stories of Simpletons; or, Fools and Their Follies
  • From Jennifer Love Hewitt to Jessica Simpson to Jennifer Aniston, this guy ` s a major wooer. CNN Transcript Jan 1, 2010
  • A maiden with many wooers often chooses the worst. 
  • Fun-loving, spirited, humorous and attracted to outdoor amour, be warned that these high energy, exuberant wooers set a strapping pace.
  • Love, life, art, death, their limits and interrelations all combine in the witty dialogue of an artistically ‘dead’ actress and her lawyer and would-be wooer.
  • How he must have admired the hero of the "Odyssey," who in one way or other accounted for all the wooers that "sorned" upon his house, and had a receipt for their bodies from the grave-digger of Memorials and Other Papers — Volume 1
  • A wooer should open his ears more than his eyes. 
  • And as Evelyn Van Wyck fled through the sombre forest aisles before the too arduous advances of her slant-browed, skin-clad wooer, the door of the cabin opened, without the courtesy of a knock, and a skin-clad woman, savage and primitive, came in. LI-WAN, THE FAIR

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