List of synonyms from "rose-colored glasses" to synonyms from "rough"
Discover all the synonyms available for the terms rottenness, rotten, rot, rose-colored glasses, rough and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the synonyms associated with it.
Definition of the day : « roué »
- As in profligate : noun person who is immoral
- As in inveigler : noun seducer
- As in Lothario : noun seducer
- As in lurer : noun seducer
- As in Don Juan : noun womanizer
- I was not prepared to find you grown from a roue into a senator.
- Extract from : « Pelham, Complete » by Edward Bulwer-Lytton
- Mark me, doctor, Dorothy will not put up an instant with a roue and a brute.
- Extract from : « Richard Carvel, Complete » by Winston Churchill
- When with the gambler, or the roue, he was equally at home—a debauchee, or a handler of cards.
- Extract from : « Ellen Walton » by Alvin Addison
- The face that might have been handsome was the reflection of a roue, dashing, devilish.
- Extract from : « Graustark » by George Barr McCutcheon
- Later the deserted admirer became again a roue inflamed with wine and submitted to a close-up that would depict his baffled rage.
- Extract from : « Merton of the Movies » by Harry Leon Wilson
- He bade fair to be utterly used up and a roue, in a few years, if he were to continue at the pace at which he was going.
- Extract from : « The History of Pendennis » by William Makepeace Thackeray
- "Not back to the home I left for the sake of a gambler and roue," she said, bitterly.
- Extract from : « Madeline Payne, the Detective's Daughter » by Lawrence L. Lynch
- He had been a roue in his youth, but seemed now the perfect representative of a benignant and virtuous old age.
- Extract from : « Sybil » by Benjamin Disraeli
- How could it be other than a terrible thought for her that her daughter listened willingly to this roue?
- Extract from : « A Woman of Thirty » by Honore de Balzac
- Vice does not form with them, as with the English roue, an occasional excess, but is consistent and regular in its habits.
- Extract from : « The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction » by Various
