The 7,491 occurrences of make love
View the definition of "make love" on The Online Slang Dictionary
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~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,464 ~ ~ ~
"'Yez might make love ter me,' she said "'I'm too old, Nora,' I answered.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 619 ~ ~ ~
Though the hero is French and takes up his residence in an English cathedral town in order to rectify our British prudery and show us how to make love, there is practically nothing here that is calculated to bring a blush to the cheek of modesty.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 6,934 ~ ~ ~
"Enoch," there was a note of protest in Diana's voice, "you aren't going to make love to me on this trip, are you?"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 92 ~ ~ ~
But Corinne and Nelvil (whom our contemporary translator[1] has endeavoured to acclimatise a little more by Anglicising his name further to Nelville), do not content themselves with making love in the congenial neighbourhoods of Tiber or Poestum, or in the stimulating presence of the masterpieces of modern and ancient art.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 79 ~ ~ ~
Rest his sowl where the daisies grow thick; For he's gone from the land of the quick: But he's still makin' love To the leddies above, An' be jabbers!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,439 ~ ~ ~
Again and again she had agreed to see him only on the condition that he would not make love to her.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 973 ~ ~ ~
Most fellows of my age and appearance would be making love to their mothers' friends, but I bar women.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,100 ~ ~ ~
She wagged her old head--white now, quite frankly, after many years of essays in difficult tints--whispered to her novelist, and made love to Tommy quite shamelessly.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,126 ~ ~ ~
Lady Kingsmead in pale pink and pearls was good enough to look at, and feeling that she wished to be made love to, he made love to her, as was his duty.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,027 ~ ~ ~
Filled by the relentless spirit of coquetry that had suddenly awakened in her, Brigit Mead danced about the great white kitchen, teasing Joyselle, making love to his wife, laughing openly at Théo's admiration.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,485 ~ ~ ~
Would he make love to her?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 272 ~ ~ ~
Dost think I am so hot to make Love to a Monument?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 324 ~ ~ ~
_Nurse._ I, sure, for he makes Love to her, and she's so hot Upon't, that she vows after this Night never to meet _Francisco_ any more; but I'le go Live with her, And so shalt thou.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 539 ~ ~ ~
In fine, both at sea and ashore, according to his theory, jolly Jack has little to do but make love, sing, dance, and drink--grog being 'his sheet-anchor, his compass, his cable, his log;' and in the _True British Sailor_, we are told that 'Jack is always content.'
~ ~ ~ Sentence 7,132 ~ ~ ~
"He made love to me," said Sally.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 758 ~ ~ ~
I've had a jolly good time being in love with him, and being made love to, and as an experience it may come in when I begin to write my book.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 912 ~ ~ ~
I'm not going to stand for bad treatment of him, and if those Southern boys who make love to every pretty girl they see, and make it better than any boys on earth, have made you forget an old friend, I'm coming down and take you back home.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 563 ~ ~ ~
"My sister is much handsomer than I; she is coming after me--go and make love to her."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,604 ~ ~ ~
_The King and his Seven Vazírs._ On the Eighth Night the Parrot relates, in a very abridged form, the story of the prince who was falsely accused by one of his father's women of having made love to her, and who was saved by the tales which the royal counsellors related to the king in turn during seven consecutive days.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 758 ~ ~ ~
420 Before his face a valley spread Where fatness laughed, wine, oil, and bread, Where all fruit-trees their sweetness shed, Where all birds made love to their kind, Where jewels twinkled, and gold lay red And not hard to find.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 867 ~ ~ ~
Caingey Thornton knew exactly when he would find Mr. Waffles at Miss Lollypop's, the confectioner, eating ices and making love to that very interesting much-courted young lady.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,566 ~ ~ ~
If ever a man may be excused for indulging in luncheon, it certainly is on a pouring wet day (when he eats for occupation), or when he is making love; both which excuses Mr. Sponge had to offer, so he just sat down and ate as heartily as the best of the party, not excepting his host himself, who was an excellent hand at luncheon.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,503 ~ ~ ~
Corinthian Tom went to them all--at least, to as many as he could manage--always dressing in the most exemplary way, as though he had been asked to show his fine clothes instead of to make love to the ladies.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,810 ~ ~ ~
He was not a bit afraid of the ladies--rather the contrary; indeed, he would make love to them all--all that were good-looking, at least, for he always candidly said that he 'wouldn't have anything to do with the ugly 'uns.'
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,251 ~ ~ ~
"Is this quarreling, Kate, or making love?"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,723 ~ ~ ~
"Also you make love to my frand, Señor Jones."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,086 ~ ~ ~
As the crowd passed out the door, Hugh McNeil made his way to the front; and as he went at once to help Cora Gurney, and gave Gussie the assistance she asked for, Dexie thought nothing of his sudden appearance amongst them until he bent over her and hissed in her ear: "I could have killed the both of you as you stood there making love to each other before them all, as if you belonged to him already!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 6,031 ~ ~ ~
You don't mean to tell me that it is Dexie you have been making love to all this time?" said he, in surprise.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 6,841 ~ ~ ~
"Mr. McNeil, I am not naturally jealous," said Guy, pleasantly, "but if my little wife is making love to you here, I'm afraid there is danger that I shall grow that way," and he laid his arm across Dexie's shoulder, and smiled at them both.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 590 ~ ~ ~
_ready-made love_, a business which is carried on with great success, and with more decency, I think, that even in _London_.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 120 ~ ~ ~
The people were unlike other people; they cared little for war, they wrote books and made love on the banks of the Rhone and Garonne.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 795 ~ ~ ~
Both children made love to Miss Blossom with their eyes.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,664 ~ ~ ~
As for the Vidame, being destitute of all other entertainment, he made love in a devoted manner.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,391 ~ ~ ~
He tried to make love to me.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,188 ~ ~ ~
When they made love to me I sent them away or bade them remain as friends.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,358 ~ ~ ~
The ordinary gardener's boy can beat me at making love.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,456 ~ ~ ~
It was to Père Anselme that she almost made love, with shy sallies at Henry, and merry replies to Madame Imogen.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,667 ~ ~ ~
He married a girl about five years ago just to make himself safe from another woman whom he had been making love to.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,476 ~ ~ ~
"I was so stunned with surprise to see you, and overcome with the knowledge that I had just given Henry my word of honor that I would not interfere with him, or make love to the lady we were going to see--a Mrs. Howard, who was married to a ruffian of an American husband shut up in a madhouse or home for inebriates!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,821 ~ ~ ~
"Years ago you made love to me.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,182 ~ ~ ~
"Has he been making love to any one?" she asked, quickly.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,157 ~ ~ ~
I am a middle-aged woman, you know, Lawrence, but I want to be made love to as though I were a silly girl!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,161 ~ ~ ~
"I am not at all sure," he said, "that I have enough courage to make love to a Duchess!"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,438 ~ ~ ~
Oh, you never made love to me, of course.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,439 ~ ~ ~
You were not the sort of man to make love to another man's wife.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,689 ~ ~ ~
But all the same I am here, and--I don't care what you do when I can't see you, but I won't have her make love to you before my face."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,041 ~ ~ ~
"My dear Mr. Burton," she expostulated, making room for him to sit down beside her, "I cannot possibly allow you to make love to me because your wife refuses to swallow a bean!"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,862 ~ ~ ~
"But I do," she insisted, "if only to stop your making love to me."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,863 ~ ~ ~
"I do not make love to you," he asserted.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 637 ~ ~ ~
A choice spot in my beloved garden, which was also Ishi's heaven, housed a family of weather-beaten world-weary cats, three chattering monkeys, that made love to Jane and hideous faces at everybody else, a parrakeet and a blind pup.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 893 ~ ~ ~
Every _chela_ even knows how impossible it is to make love satisfactorily in nothing but your _linga sharira_.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,116 ~ ~ ~
I was surprised, because I had hoped to find in you an intelligent companion; and mortified at the discovery that you could not rise to higher ground than that of an ordinary admirer,--men in these days seem to think that women have no other _raison d'etre_ except to be made love to.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 138 ~ ~ ~
They simply squandered hospitality on Nickie the Kid that night; they had neighbours in to see him; they had music, and Dr. Crips sang, and danced, and drank, and made love to Miss Dickson out under the elderberries.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,655 ~ ~ ~
"I shall probably never make love to a widow again," he said, sadly; "they are so ungrateful."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,544 ~ ~ ~
He cares enough to want me to make love to him when--" she halted and put both hands over her face; through her slight figure ran a faint shudder--"when I can't."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 7,158 ~ ~ ~
I used to dream of having rich men and titled men come to me and make love.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 781 ~ ~ ~
"Why are you trying so hard to make love to me?" the woman asked, with the half-amused smile with which the Eve near thirty receives the homage of a boy.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 789 ~ ~ ~
Why did he make love to her?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 524 ~ ~ ~
His answer to her question already quoted, reveals a love which the world's judgment may rank as the best and noblest, but reveals a principle which, applied to aught beneath the only and supremest good, makes love only a more insidious and deeply corrupting form of self-pleasing: "'Tis what I love determines how I love."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 437 ~ ~ ~
I should say they hadn't sung together more than two or three times since the death of Lord Clarenceux; so, even if he has been making love to her, she's scarcely had time to refuse him--eh?"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 438 ~ ~ ~
"If he has been making love to Rosa," said Mrs. Sullivan slowly, "whether she has refused him or not, it's a misfortune for him, that's all."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 444 ~ ~ ~
"And, let me tell you," she added, "he has been making love to her."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,401 ~ ~ ~
Thou canst not wish for more than thou shalt win by her; for she is beautiful, virtuous and wealthy, three deep persuasions to make love frolic."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,498 ~ ~ ~
'_I'd no sooner_,' says one of Congreve's characters, '_play with a man that slighted his ill-fortune, than I'd make love to a woman who undervalued the loss of her reputation_.'
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,762 ~ ~ ~
How will he make love?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,965 ~ ~ ~
On the way home the cowpuncher made love.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,943 ~ ~ ~
Mr. Brown's career advances prosperously; he makes love in the dark to his supposed cousin _pro_ Snoxall, in the hearing of the supposed wife (for the real Selbourne has been married privately) and his supposed friend, both supposing him false, mightily abuse him, all being still in the dark.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 6,544 ~ ~ ~
"The horse is a noble animal," as a gentleman once wittily observed, when he found himself, for the first time in his life, in a position to make love; and we beg leave to repeat the remark--"the horse is a noble animal," whether we consider him in his usefulness or in his beauty; whether caparisoned in the _chamfrein_ and _demi-peake_ of the chivalry of olden times, or scarcely fettered and surmounted by the snaffle and hog-skin of the present; whether he excites our envy when bounding over the sandy deserts of Arabia, or awakens our sympathies when drawing sand from Hampstead and the parts adjacent; whether we see him as romance pictures him, foaming in the lists, or bearing, "through flood and field," the brave, the beautiful, and the benighted; or, as we know him in reality, the companion of our pleasures, the slave of our necessities, the dislocator of our necks, or one of the performers at our funeral; whether--but we are not drawing a "bill in Chancery."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,672 ~ ~ ~
It is very flattering, no doubt, to be made love to in pretty verses.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,709 ~ ~ ~
(_laughs nervously_) With how little ingenuity men make love!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,173 ~ ~ ~
Men make love, like everything else, a mere _game_.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 139 ~ ~ ~
He's rather dull, and he can't bear women fussing about and wanting to be made love to."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,094 ~ ~ ~
A beautiful blonde Englishwoman visits Russia, and is violently made love to by a young Russian aristocrat.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 930 ~ ~ ~
A garden, falling in decay, Where statues gray Peer, broken, out of tangled weed And thorny seed; Satyr and Nymph, that once made love By walk and grove: And, near a fountain, shattered, green with mould, A sundial, lichen-old.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,315 ~ ~ ~
Once in Minnesota, a young man had made love to her, but she could not return that love, so she was in duty bound not to encourage him.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,318 ~ ~ ~
A number of times good men had been about to make love to her in earnest, but each time some strange feeling had checked them.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 750 ~ ~ ~
I don't like to be teased at the best of times, and I think it positively wrong to make love a subject for laughter and nonsense.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 6,514 ~ ~ ~
"He makes love to you, eh?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,151 ~ ~ ~
Thus man, as the old saying has it, makes love all the year round.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,561 ~ ~ ~
On the way, Don Rodrigue makes love to her assiduously, but the young girl's heart seems untroubled.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 10,809 ~ ~ ~
for in former days you made love openly enough--oh yes!--to me, to me myself--oh, my dear, I can remember.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 128 ~ ~ ~
Among the monuments of a great historic past, the speculative spirit of the East made love to the plastic beauty of the West, until, at last, they were united in happy union.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,323 ~ ~ ~
"She was making love to the assistant, so the chief physician sent her back."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,339 ~ ~ ~
Let her do whatever her soul prompts her to do; if she would make love to the assistant, let her do so.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,380 ~ ~ ~
"I, a man of the world, whom any girl of the upper class would be only too happy to marry, offered to become the husband of that woman, and she could not wait, but made love to the assistant surgeon," he thought, looking at her with hatred.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,398 ~ ~ ~
Let her make love to the assistant-that was her business.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,597 ~ ~ ~
Are you afraid that I am going to attempt to make love to you?"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,243 ~ ~ ~
I shouldn't be surprised if he took every opportunity to make love to you."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,429 ~ ~ ~
Those who love themselves above all things, that is, with whom self-love prevails, also make love to the neighbor to begin with themselves (n. 6710).
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,431 ~ ~ ~
But those who are Christians and who love God above all things make love to the neighbor to begin with the Lord, because He is to be loved above all things (n. 6706, 6711, 6819, 6824).
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,844 ~ ~ ~
It was Jacques, one of the farm laborers, a tall fellow from Picardy, who had been making love to her for a long time.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 529 ~ ~ ~
As Wanda had grown accustomed to luxury and amusement, the quiet life in her parents' house did not suit her any longer, and even while she was still in mourning for her husband, she allowed a Hungarian magnate to make love to her, and she went off with him at a venture, and continued the same extravagant life which she had led when her husband was alive, at her own authority.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 580 ~ ~ ~
The Exotic Prince had, however, made the conquest of the charming daughter of a wealthy Austrian Count, and had cut out an excellent young officer who was wooing her; and he, in his despair began to make love to Frau von Chabert, and at last told her he loved her, but she only laughed at him.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,648 ~ ~ ~
And the Reverend William Greenfield, Vicar of St. Sampson's, Tottenham, the saintly man whose blood was inflamed by heating food and liquor, whose ears were like full-blown poppies and who had a nose like a tomato, left his wife and, as had been his habit for four years, went to make love to Polly, the servant.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,876 ~ ~ ~
"It must be very terrible to be thus ashamed of oneself, to have that longing for kisses which console the most wretched in their misery, which satisfy hunger and thirst, and assuage pain; that illusion of delicious, intoxicating kisses, the delight and the balm of which such a person can never know; the horror of that dishonor of being pointed at, made fun of, driven away like unclean creatures that prostitute their sex, and make love vile by unmentionable rites; oh!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 197 ~ ~ ~
Under the foliage, which was still rather thin, the tall, thick, bright, green grass, was inundated by the sun, and full of small insects that also made love to one another, and birds were singing in all directions.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 249 ~ ~ ~
He certainly looked magnificent on horseback; there was something of the fighter, something bold and mettlesome about him, _a valiant look_, as our grandmothers used to say, when they threw themselves into the arms of the conquerors, between two campaigns, though the same conquerors had loud, rough voices, even when they were making love, as they had to dominate the noise of the firing, and violent gestures, as if they were using their swords and issuing orders, who did not waste time over useless refinements, and in squandering the precious hours which were counted so avariciously, in minor caresses, but sounded the charge immediately, and made the assault, without meeting with any more resistance than they did from a redoubt.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 275 ~ ~ ~
He was continually on the alert, and looked out for intrigues with the acuteness of a policeman, followed women about, had all the impudence and all the cleverness of the fast man who has made love for forty years, without ever meaning anything serious, who knows all its lies, tricks and illusions, and who can still do a march without halting on the road, or requiring too much music to put him in proper trim.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,790 ~ ~ ~
Her husband listened to her with the greatest indifference, for it was one of his fundamental rules never to make love to any of his wife's female friends, and he went to his club as usual at night, and the next day had forgotten all about the Polish lady.
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