The 7,491 occurrences of make love
View the definition of "make love" on The Online Slang Dictionary
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~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,899 ~ ~ ~
"I will make love to you, if you like," he said, but he felt in an instant that his joke was in bad taste.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,142 ~ ~ ~
He looked as if he wanted to make love to _me_ this time.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,624 ~ ~ ~
It disapproves of a young man's making love to an older woman, and if-- Hagbart.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,058 ~ ~ ~
She had talked of love so often as an abstract thing, she had seen so many love-makings of others, and so many men had tried to make love to her in her short brilliant life, and she had always thought it could not come near her, because, of course, she really loved Ronald.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,015 ~ ~ ~
It was horrible; he was making love to her, this wretch, whom she despised.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,019 ~ ~ ~
It was not in order that Pocock Vancouver might make love to her that she had sent away Bonamy Biggielow, the harmless little poet.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,402 ~ ~ ~
Meanwhile Vancouver, who was weakly but frequently susceptible to the charms of woman, had made up his mind that if Josephine had enough pin- money she would make him an admirable wife, and he accordingly began to make love to her in his own fashion, as has been seen.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 973 ~ ~ ~
Lady Eustace knew that this was the way in which Lord Fawn made love, and thought that from him it was as good as any other way.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 6,410 ~ ~ ~
She still pretends that she is engaged to Frederic, and tells everybody that the marriage is not broken off, and yet she has her cousin with her, making love to him in the most indecent way.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 11,877 ~ ~ ~
The man had been making love to his cousin after his engagement to Lucy.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 11,894 ~ ~ ~
I fear there is no doubt that he has been making love to his cousin, Lady Eustace.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 13,150 ~ ~ ~
She conceived that the man must be impertinent if Mrs. Carbuncle's assertions were true;-but she was neither angry nor disgusted, and she allowed him to talk to her, and even to make love to her, after his nasty pseudo-clerical fashion.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 14,648 ~ ~ ~
She liked his audacity; and then, when he was making love, he was not afraid of talking out boldly about his heart.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 15,722 ~ ~ ~
She had never been made love to after this fashion before.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 38 ~ ~ ~
WHAT WE ALL THINK THAT age was older once than now, In spite of locks untimely shed, Or silvered on the youthful brow; That babes make love and children wed. That sunshine had a heavenly glow, Which faded with those "good old days" When winters came with deeper snow, And autumns with a softer haze.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,764 ~ ~ ~
WHAT WE ALL THINK THAT age was older once than now, In spite of locks untimely shed, Or silvered on the youthful brow; That babes make love and children wed. That sunshine had a heavenly glow, Which faded with those "good old days" When winters came with deeper snow, And autumns with a softer haze.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 673 ~ ~ ~
But it don't seem fair to make love to them and pertend like I was nuts over them and then when I had learned all they was to know I would half to get rid of them and cast them to 1 side and god knows how many wounds I will leave behind me but probably as many as though I was a regular soldier or snipper but then I wouldn't feel so bad about it because it would be men and not girlies but everything goes in war fair as they say Al and if Uncle Sam and Gen. Pershing asks me to do it I will do whatever they ask me and they can't nobody really hold it vs. me because of why I am doing it.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 6,368 ~ ~ ~
Corey had never thought of her sister, much less made love to her, or promised to marry her.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,036 ~ ~ ~
It pleased Lord Monmouth to show great courtesies to a fallen race with whom he sympathised; whose fathers had been his friends in the days of his hot youth; whose mothers he had made love to; whose palaces had been his home; whose brilliant fĂȘtes he remembered; whose fanciful splendour excited his early imagination; and whose magnificent and wanton luxury had developed his own predisposition for boundless enjoyment.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 6,521 ~ ~ ~
Because a young man had made love to his daughter, who was really in no manner entitled to do so.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,112 ~ ~ ~
It was as though she had walked suddenly into a room where a man and woman were making love.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,128 ~ ~ ~
Two birds in a tree nearby made love to each other.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,826 ~ ~ ~
There was a creative impulse in her that could not function until she had been made love to by a man.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 328 ~ ~ ~
It is so quite what you expect that if you could you would turn away in satiety, especially from the swarming life of the poor, which seems to have no concealments from the public, but frankly works at all the trades and arts that can be carried on out-of-doors; cooks, eats, laughs, cries, sleeps, wakes, makes love, quarrels, scolds, does everything but wash itself--clothes enough it washes for other people's life.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,127 ~ ~ ~
"You make love beautifully," she heard herself saying coolly.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 177 ~ ~ ~
I was making love, and I warn you, if your recital be not interesting I shall be very angry."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,755 ~ ~ ~
"Make love to her, to find out if she be a prude?"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,456 ~ ~ ~
Did you come to Paris to make love?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,458 ~ ~ ~
Go home, if you wish to make love, but, here, keep to your political intrigues, my master."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 9,847 ~ ~ ~
"That no one shall make love to my wife."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 9,848 ~ ~ ~
"And I warn you that you are too late, and that some one makes love to her already."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,964 ~ ~ ~
I confess I thought it charming, and if at some period of their lives people must make love I do not believe there is a more inoffensive way of doing it.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 7,420 ~ ~ ~
YOU don't make love to her."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,486 ~ ~ ~
When the cock-robin makes love he is the same considerate, deferential, but insinuating gallant.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,581 ~ ~ ~
"He would take a drum with him to make love to a neighbour's wife," said John Telfer.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,645 ~ ~ ~
They read no good books, think no clean thoughts, are made love to as John Telfer had said, with kisses in a darkened room by a shame-faced yokel and, after marrying some such a yokel, live lives of unspeakable blankness.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,836 ~ ~ ~
I think that she likes me and once or twice I have thought she would not greatly mind my making love to her, but I do not understand her just the same."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,238 ~ ~ ~
"I like you all right and if I were a well woman I should make love to you and marry you and then see to it there was something in this world for you besides money and tall buildings and men and machines that make guns."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,884 ~ ~ ~
Sometimes they try to make love to me and then steal back the money they have given me.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 6,986 ~ ~ ~
In plays and novels, and I dare say in real life too sometimes, when the wanton heroine chooses to exert her powers of fascination, and to flirt with Sir Harry or the Captain, the hero, in a pique, goes off and makes love to somebody else: both acknowledge their folly after a while, shake hands, and are reconciled, and the curtain drops, or the volume ends.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 10,664 ~ ~ ~
We chat with our pretty neighbour, or survey the young ones sporting; we make love and are jealous; we dance, or obsequiously turn over the leaves of Cecilia's music-book; we play whist, or go to sleep in the arm-chair, according to our ages and conditions.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 12,381 ~ ~ ~
"To make love well, you must absolutely have a chaise-de-poste, and a scandal afterwards.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 12,943 ~ ~ ~
"'My poor grandmother, whenever I spoke upon such a subject, would break out into a thousand gibes and sarcasms, and point to many of our friends who had made love-matches, and were quarrelling now as fiercely as though they had never loved each other.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,079 ~ ~ ~
Besides, she objected, with a sort of physical repulsion, to being directly made love to.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,301 ~ ~ ~
"Pray don't make love to me!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,314 ~ ~ ~
Decisively, but yet with some return of kindness, she said-- "About making love?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,204 ~ ~ ~
He had hunted the tiger--had he ever been in love or made love?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,526 ~ ~ ~
I knew he meant to make love to me, and I had it firmly in my mind that a nobleman and one who was not a Jew could have no love for me that was not half contempt.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,481 ~ ~ ~
It seemed to foreshadow that capability of reticence in Deronda that his imagination was much occupied with two women, to neither of whom would he have held it possible that he should ever make love.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 12,269 ~ ~ ~
Yet Rex wondered much whether Gwendolen had been in love with the successful suitor, or had only forborne to tell him that she hated being made love to.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,080 ~ ~ ~
Besides, she objected, with a sort of physical repulsion, to being directly made love to.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,302 ~ ~ ~
"Pray don't make love to me!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,315 ~ ~ ~
Decisively, but yet with some return of kindness, she said-- "About making love?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,205 ~ ~ ~
He had hunted the tiger--had he ever been in love or made love?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,527 ~ ~ ~
I knew he meant to make love to me, and I had it firmly in my mind that a nobleman and one who was not a Jew could have no love for me that was not half contempt.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,482 ~ ~ ~
It seemed to foreshadow that capability of reticence in Deronda that his imagination was much occupied with two women, to neither of whom would he have held it possible that he should ever make love.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 12,270 ~ ~ ~
Yet Rex wondered much whether Gwendolen had been in love with the successful suitor, or had only forborne to tell him that she hated being made love to.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 62 ~ ~ ~
Even cosmopolite Paris has her grand opera sung in French, and easy-going Vienna insists that Don Juan shall make love in German.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 300 ~ ~ ~
Romeo could not have made love under these conditions.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 915 ~ ~ ~
Alaric Tudor had certainly come out with no defined intention of making love as Harry Norman had done; but with such a companion it was very difficult for him to avoid it.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 918 ~ ~ ~
Alaric Tudor had no defined intention of making love; but he had a sort of suspicion that he might, if he pleased, do so successfully; and he had no defined intention of letting it alone.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,546 ~ ~ ~
But it must not be thought that Charley abused the friendship of Mrs. Woodward, and made love to Katie, as love is usually made-- with warm words, assurances of affection, with squeezing of the hand, with sighs, and all a lover's ordinary catalogue of resources.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,381 ~ ~ ~
You would recognise this very quickly if I made love to you."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 6,078 ~ ~ ~
Make love to?"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 7,995 ~ ~ ~
"You won't make love to me, will you, Stephen?"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 8,468 ~ ~ ~
you are making love to me!"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 743 ~ ~ ~
Lodgers often make love to their landladies; what would she do if Mr. Lennox made love to her?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,348 ~ ~ ~
'Of course we've been very wicked,' she continued as if she had not heard him, 'and you can't respect me very much; but then you made love to me so, and the music made me forget everything.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,669 ~ ~ ~
Because your husband hates you--because he wants to make love to another woman.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,097 ~ ~ ~
He's not only involving her in his criminal conspiracy, but he's making love to her; he's teaching her to love him.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,239 ~ ~ ~
"I reckon, Christie," he said slowly, between puffs on his cigar, the lighted end of which faintly illumined his face, "you've got the idea I have brought you out here to make love.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,597 ~ ~ ~
He had made love before, yet somehow this was different; he felt half afraid of this woman, and it was a new sensation altogether, and not unpleasant.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,769 ~ ~ ~
"You were not making love to her there, then, when I came up behind you?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,096 ~ ~ ~
The other diversions of the knights and nobles were hunting, hawking, feasting, drinking, making love, minstrelsy, and chess.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 374 ~ ~ ~
For their design is not to make love, or inspire it; they decorate themselves in this manner as they proceed to war, in order to seem taller and more terrible; and dress for the eyes of their enemies.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,576 ~ ~ ~
People just yearn to come in; they make love to me for it all over the place; there's the biggest crowd at the door.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 9 ~ ~ ~
FAVORITE QUOTATIONS A c'est egal, mam'selle, they don't mind these things in France A rather unlady-like fondness for snuff A crowd is a mob, if composed even of bishops Accept of benefits with a tone of dissatisfaction Accustomed to the slowness and the uncertainty of the law Air of one who seeks to consume than enjoy his time Always a pleasure felt in the misfortunes of even our best friend Amount of children which is algebraically expressed by an X And some did pray-who never prayed before Annoyance of her vulgar loquacity Brought a punishment far exceeding the merits of the case Chateaux en Espagne Chew over the cud of his misfortune Daily association sustains the interest of the veriest trifles Dear, dirty Dublin-Io te salute Delectable modes of getting over the ground through life Devilish hot work, this, said the colonel Disputing "one brandy too much" in his bill Empty, valueless, heartless flirtation Ending-I never yet met the man who could tell when it ended Enjoy the name without the gain Enough is as good as a feast Escaped shot and shell to fall less gloriously beneath champagne Every misfortune has an end at last Exclaimed with Othello himself, "Chaos was come again;" Fearful of a self-deception where so much was at stake Fighting like devils for conciliation Finish in sorrow what you have begun in folly Gardez vous des femmes, and more especially if they be Irish Green silk, "a little off the grass, and on the bottle" Had a most remarkable talent for selecting a son-in-law Had to hear the "proud man's contumely" Half pleased and whole frightened with the labour before him Has but one fault, but that fault is a grand one Hating each other for the love of God He first butthers them up, and then slithers them down He was very much disguised in drink How ingenious is self-deception If such be a sin, "then heaven help the wicked" Indifferent to the many rebuffs she momentarily encountered Involuntary satisfaction at some apparent obstacle to my path Jaunting-cars, with three on a side and "one in the well" Least important functionaries took the greatest airs upon them Levelling character of a taste for play Listen to reason, as they would call it in Ireland Memory of them when hallowed by time or distance Might almost excite compassion even in an enemy Misfortune will find you out, if ye were hid in a tay chest Mistaking zeal for inclination Mistaking your abstraction for attention My English proves me Irish My French always shows me to be English Never able to restrain myself from a propensity to make love Nine-inside leathern "conveniency," bumping ten miles an hour No equanimity like his who acts as your second in a duel Nothing seemed extravagant to hopes so well founded Nothing ever makes a man so agreeable as the belief that he is Now, young ladies, come along, and learn something, if you can Oh, the distance is nothing, but it is the pace that kills Opportunely been so overpowered as to fall senseless Other bottle of claret that lies beyond the frontier of prudence Packed jury of her relatives, who rarely recommend you to mercy Pleased are we ever to paint the past according to our own fancy Profoundly and learnedly engaged in discussing medicine Profuse in his legends of his own doings in love and war Rather better than people with better coats on them Rather a dabbler in the "ologies" Recovered as much of their senses as the wine had left them Respectable heir-loom of infirmity Seems ever to accompany dullness a sustaining power of vanity Sixteenthly, like a Presbyterian minister's sermon Stoicism which preludes sending your friend out of the world Strong opinions against tobacco within doors Suppose I have laughed at better men than ever he was Sure if he did, doesn't he take it out o' me in the corns?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 205 ~ ~ ~
And you have made love to my daughter!"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,523 ~ ~ ~
And you have made love to my daughter!"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 782 ~ ~ ~
So instead of spoiling parchment, I made love to the notary's daughter.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,643 ~ ~ ~
So instead of spoiling parchment, I made love to the notary's daughter.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 328 ~ ~ ~
And this the tendency of the physical frame to require elsewhere support, nor to feel secure of strength, influenced perhaps her mind, and made love, and the dependence of love, more necessary to her than to the thoughtful and lofty Madeline.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 116 ~ ~ ~
Were the avalanche over you for a day,--I grant your state of torture,--but had an avalanche rested over you for years, and not yet fallen, you would forget that it could ever fall; you would eat, sleep, and make love, as if it were not!"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 159 ~ ~ ~
The gentleman eats, and talks, and swears, and jests, and plays cards and makes love, and tries to cheat, and is cheated, and his man stands behind with his eyes and ears open,--augh!"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 441 ~ ~ ~
You would make religion only the creation of reason--as well might you make love the same--what is either, unless you let it spring also from the feelings?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 320 ~ ~ ~
And this the tendency of the physical frame to require elsewhere support, nor to feel secure of strength, influenced perhaps her mind, and made love, and the dependence of love, more necessary to her than to the thoughtful and lofty Madeline.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,107 ~ ~ ~
Were the avalanche over you for a day,--I grant your state of torture,--but had an avalanche rested over you for years, and not yet fallen, you would forget that it could ever fall; you would eat, sleep, and make love, as if it were not!"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,988 ~ ~ ~
The gentleman eats, and talks, and swears, and jests, and plays cards and makes love, and tries to cheat, and is cheated, and his man stands behind with his eyes and ears open,--augh!"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,269 ~ ~ ~
You would make religion only the creation of reason--as well might you make love the same--what is either, unless you let it spring also from the feelings?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 118 ~ ~ ~
if I went to the Opera in the evening, I learned to dance in the morning; if I drove to a soiree at the Duchesse de Perpignan's, it was not till I had fenced an hour at the Salon des Assauts d'Armes; and if I made love to the duchess herself it was sure to be in a position I had been a whole week in acquiring from my master of the graces; in short, I took the greatest pains to complete my education.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,098 ~ ~ ~
if I went to the Opera in the evening, I learned to dance in the morning; if I drove to a soiree at the Duchesse de Perpignan's, it was not till I had fenced an hour at the Salon des Assauts d'Armes; and if I made love to the duchess herself it was sure to be in a position I had been a whole week in acquiring from my master of the graces; in short, I took the greatest pains to complete my education.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 313 ~ ~ ~
As for the present, he writes poems, makes love, is still good-natured, humorous, and odd; is rather unhappily addicted to wine and borrowing, and rigidly keeps that oath of the Carthusians which never suffers them to carry any money about them."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 60 ~ ~ ~
If thou wantest to make love, there are ladies in plenty whom thou needest not to marry.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 440 ~ ~ ~
"We believed so at the time, my Lord; but there are as many changes in the fashion of making love as there are in that of making dresses.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,758 ~ ~ ~
As for the present, he writes poems, makes love, is still good-natured, humorous, and odd; is rather unhappily addicted to wine and borrowing, and rigidly keeps that oath of the Carthusians which never suffers them to carry any money about them."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,746 ~ ~ ~
If thou wantest to make love, there are ladies in plenty whom thou needest not to marry.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,048 ~ ~ ~
"We believed so at the time, my Lord; but there are as many changes in the fashion of making love as there are in that of making dresses.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 184 ~ ~ ~
"We must not dispute; so I will hold my peace: but make love all you will; what are the false smiles of a lip which a few years can blight as an autumn leaf?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 189 ~ ~ ~
I will laugh, and talk, and walk, and make love, and drink wine, and be all that other men are.
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