slattern उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
- Peters is also heavily involved in Winnipeg's music scene, writing, recording and / or producing for / with The Liptonians, Slattern, Demetra, Ruth Moody, This Hisses and Triunfo do Gato.
- Miller gets it out the way in the opening scene, so we can concentrate on more important things, like why Sagnier, who was the troublemaking slattern in " Swimming Pool, " is still playing nubile ingenues.
- In the world of Goth, nature itself lurks as a malign protagonist, causing flesh to rot, rivers to flood, monuments to crumble and women to turn into slatterns, their hair streaming and lipstick askew ".
- Millay wrote five verse dramas early in her career, including " Two Slatterns and a King " and " The Lamp and the Bell ", a poem written for Vassar College about love between women.
- The women were genuinely as described : " From all walks of life . " There was a kindly slattern trying to wrest comedy from menopausal discontent, a boozy former foster child striving to afford college and a nerdy widow who considered her ratty, overgrown hair a tribute to her dead husband.
- "We are in a dreary plight when Mob-orator puts on the Muse to move the country, and shows her as a slattern with a furious jingle, to suit the country's taste, " the novelist George Meredith wrote to a friend at the turn of the century.
- In turn, Ruthie, who has recently returned from a hospital stay, behaves like one of those out-of-control adolescents who show up on cable television : she dresses like Slattern Barbie, refuses to get up in the morning, sneaks out of the house at night, keeps bad company, and whines, a lot.
- And if what screenwriter Donald Day Stewart removed from Hawthorne's story is bad, even worse is what he put in _ murder, attempted rape, Indian massacre, suicide, a coven of hippie-like slatterns, and _ that old war horse of the liberal imagination _ hypocrites of the McCarthyite stamp in the persons of the iron Puritan fathers.
- :: I'm not aware of it being used for brothel ( neither is the OED ), and I think slut here means " A woman of dirty, slovenly, or untidy habits or appearance; a foul slattern " with perhaps a shade of the rare meaning " A kitchen-maid; a drudge " ( both from the OED ).
- In the synonymy of misogyny, harlot is a professional, now called a sex worker; a strumpet, a bimbo and a slut are " unchaste to the point of being debauched "; a trollop and a slattern are " sloppy but not necessarily immoral "; a wench is archaically " sexy without a judgment of promiscuity, " and a jade is " plain worn out, " whether from honest or oldest-professional labor.