The 7,491 occurrences of make love
View the definition of "make love" on The Online Slang Dictionary
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~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,302 ~ ~ ~
"That fellow makes love as easy as falling off a log," grumbled Chess.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,305 ~ ~ ~
If he were my brother--or husband--I would never know when he was really making love or just registering love.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,963 ~ ~ ~
There were a few months when the young mill hand who brought disaster upon her, made love to her, and hung about her small home, sometimes leaning upon the rickety gate to talk and laugh with her, sometimes loitering with her in the streets or taking her to cheap picnics or on rather rowdy excursions.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,913 ~ ~ ~
Until they were married--which usually happened very early--they were always being made love to and knew that this was what God had made them for--that they should dance a great deal, that they should have many flowers and bonbons laid at their small feet, that beautiful youths with sentimental tenor voices should serenade them with guitars on moonlight nights, which last charming thing led them to congratulate themselves on having been born in the South, as such romantic incidents were not a feature of life in New York and Boston.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,915 ~ ~ ~
As it was the portion of their fair companions to be made love to, it was theirs to make love.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,110 ~ ~ ~
He doesn't make love; he discusses tactics with the colonel.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 52 ~ ~ ~
Besides, Estelle had been made love to for some time, and Winn's way was undeniably different from that of her other admirers.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 55 ~ ~ ~
In the interval of these decisive actions he made love to her in a steady, definite way that was difficult to laugh at and impossible to turn aside.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,033 ~ ~ ~
There wouldn't be anything at all after Claire, and he wasn't going to make love to her.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,235 ~ ~ ~
I'm afraid you'll think I haven't played the game, but I haven't made love to her; only I can't stay any longer; I've got to clear out."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,650 ~ ~ ~
To hold skeins of silk whilst my Lady winds them, maybe, and to ride the great horse, and play tennis and shuttlecock with his Lord, and to make up his mind to which of all his Lady's damsels he'll make love o' the lightest make."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 252 ~ ~ ~
Paris has changed terribly of late years, but there are moments when all her old brilliancy comes back, when the air is again full of the intoxicating effervescence of life, when the well-remembered conviction comes over one that in Paris the main object of every man's and every woman's existence is to make love, to amuse and to be amused.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 720 ~ ~ ~
'I never could induce this creature to make love to me,' cried Madame Bonanni, turning to Margaret with a laugh.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 723 ~ ~ ~
It is true that if he made love to me, I should have him turned out of the house.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,416 ~ ~ ~
Lushington had never trusted Logotheti, but since his instinct and the force of circumstances had told him that the Greek was making love to Margaret and that Margaret liked his society, he hated the man in a most unchristian manner, and few things would have given the usually peaceable man of letters such unmitigated satisfaction as to see the shining white motor car blow up and scatter his rival's arms and legs to the thirty-two points of the compass.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,401 ~ ~ ~
'I don't want you to make love to me just now,' she said, swinging her foot a little as she sat.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,188 ~ ~ ~
He always told me that if I went wrong he would shoot me--and when the English artist came and lodged in our house for the summer and made love to me, my father explained everything to him also.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 12,762 ~ ~ ~
"There is a case in the State Trials, where a certain officer made love to a (supposed) miser's daughter, and ultimately induced her to give her father slow poison, while nursing him in sickness.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 13,872 ~ ~ ~
One other letter throws light upon an objection taken not unfairly to the too great speed with which the heroine, after being married, reclaimed, and widowed, is in a page or two again made love to, and remarried by the hero.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 6,305 ~ ~ ~
Why, when I was bound up they made love to each other before my very face.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,236 ~ ~ ~
When women understand that a man who can not look at a woman before marriage without making love to her--can't do it afterward--they will save themselves a lot of trouble."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,238 ~ ~ ~
"No one can say you hurt yourself making love."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 399 ~ ~ ~
"That fellow Vernon has been making love to Jean.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,406 ~ ~ ~
If he was so fortunate as to have lands, he had generally passed his life on them, shooting, fishing, carousing, and making love among his vassals.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,198 ~ ~ ~
Those officers who won his favour by servility and adulation easily obtained leave of absence, and spent weeks in London, revelling in taverns, scouring the streets, or making love to the masked ladies in the pit of the theatre.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,722 ~ ~ ~
The poet's Mussulman princes make love in the style of Amadis, preach about the death of Socrates, and embellish their discourse with allusions to the mythological stories of Ovid.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,869 ~ ~ ~
406 The humble student would not have dared to raise his eyes to a lady of family; but, when he had become a clergyman, he began, after the fashion of the clergymen of that generation, to make love to a pretty waitingmaid who was the chief ornament of the servants' hall, and whose name is inseparably associated with his in a sad and mysterious history.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 7,598 ~ ~ ~
No man told a story with more vivacity; no man sate his horse better in a hunting party; no man made love with more success; no man staked and lost heaps of gold with more agreeable unconcern; no man was more intimately acquainted with the adventures, the attachments, the enmities of the lords and ladies who daily filled the halls of Versailles.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 249 ~ ~ ~
I can make love and mind my game at once, as Flaminius can tell you.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 404 ~ ~ ~
I have too much regard for you to suffer you to make love at such disadvantage.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 425 ~ ~ ~
If you want to play your part properly, you had better make love to her.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,497 ~ ~ ~
"Has Armitage been making love to her?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,326 ~ ~ ~
He resolved that he would talk to her; that he would make love to her; that he would marry her and banish from his heart those hateful emotions which Millar had aroused.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,336 ~ ~ ~
Millar had brought her into the anteroom to show her Karl making love to Elsa.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,407 ~ ~ ~
Almost to herself Olga whispered her next words: "This afternoon he wanted to kill you when you only spoke of making love to me, and now--he saw you whisper in my ear, hold my hand, touch my shoulders.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,063 ~ ~ ~
I was not entirely pleased with the latter arrangement, because many days had not passed ere I concluded it would be a pleasant pastime for me to make love to Cousin Maggie.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,085 ~ ~ ~
"I'm not sure," I continued, "that I sha'n't commence making love to you, and perhaps I might marry you.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 66 ~ ~ ~
Väinämöinen makes love to Aino in the forest; but she returns home in grief and anger, and finally wanders away again, and is drowned while trying to swim out to some water-nymphs in a lake.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 76 ~ ~ ~
Väinämöinen, on his journey, finds the daughter of Louhi sitting on a rainbow weaving, and makes love to her.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,984 ~ ~ ~
"That's unfortunate," returned Dunham, "for I've been in Seaton for months, and there's nobody to make love to there but Miss La--" He nearly bit his tongue off in the suddenness of his halt, but he did save himself.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 544 ~ ~ ~
On another occasion we walked from Maidstone to Rochester on pilgrimage to the inn where Alfred Jingle borrowed Mr. Winkle's coat to attend the Assembly, when he made love to the buxom widow.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,921 ~ ~ ~
Presently Othello enters and when Brabantio's back is turned he makes love to Desdemona--a handsome fellow, this Othello, with the manner of a hero and curled moustachios.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 10,082 ~ ~ ~
"I'm tired of being made love to.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 10,083 ~ ~ ~
I'm going," she said, "to fling off all maidenly reserve and make love to you."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 10,098 ~ ~ ~
"Do you like the way I make love?" she said.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,521 ~ ~ ~
This unfortunate mistress of Herbert was magnified into a _seraglio_; extraordinary tales of the voluptuous life of one who generally _at his studies outwatched the stars_, were rife in English society; and 'Hoary marquises and stripling dukes,' who were either _protecting opera-dancers_, or, still worse, _making love to their neighbors' wives_, either looked grave when the name of Herbert (Lord Byron) was mentioned in female society, or affectedly confused, as if they could a tale unfold, if they were not convinced, that the sense of propriety among all present was infinitely superior to their sense of curiosity."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,676 ~ ~ ~
Then he exclaims:-- "What misery to have nothing else to do but make love and verses, and create enemies for one's self."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 6,566 ~ ~ ~
Did he not make love of country incarnate in that admirable type (_the young Venetian Foscari_); too fine a type, perhaps, though historical, to be understood by every one.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,020 ~ ~ ~
M'Hearty, Simmons, and every soul in the mess were most pleased to see him, and that evening Murray was the hero of the hour; and a very long and strange story he had to tell of his imprisonment, his harsh treatment, and his making love to the prison-governor's daughter, through whose cleverness he at last managed to escape, dressed as a _grisette_.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,937 ~ ~ ~
He did not make love to her after the manner of his youth.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,967 ~ ~ ~
"Well, perhaps not; except one or two old men whom I have seen making love."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 7,662 ~ ~ ~
As Arthur had evinced no symptoms of making love to Miss Gauntlet, the good lady had been satisfied, and now she felt somewhat slighted that her hospitality was not more valued.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 9,232 ~ ~ ~
When gentlemen past sixty make love to ladies past forty, it may be supposed that they are not so dilatory in their proceedings as younger swains and younger maidens.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 11,753 ~ ~ ~
That George Bertram was an amusing fellow, and made love in much better style than the major, certainly was true.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 504 ~ ~ ~
"I do scorn you, Herr Steinmarc, when you come to me pretending to make love like a young man, with your Sunday clothes on, and your hair brushed smooth, and your new shoes.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 508 ~ ~ ~
Old men are very well in their way, I daresay; but they shouldn't go about making love to young women."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 605 ~ ~ ~
"Linda," Madame Staubach said, "Peter has told me that Ludovic Valcarm has been-making love to you.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,057 ~ ~ ~
But young women, such as I see them to be, because they have been so instructed, want to have something soft and delicate; a creature without a single serious thought, who is chosen because his cheek is red and his hair is soft; because he can dance, and speak vain, meaningless words; because he makes love, as the foolish parlance of the world goes.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,364 ~ ~ ~
He could not make love to her in church.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,438 ~ ~ ~
Don't you know how curious I am as to how you of this planet make love?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,812 ~ ~ ~
The hare-brained idiot was actually trying to make love to me.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,062 ~ ~ ~
I was rather afraid, at one time, that he was going to spoil it all by making love to me, after the manner of young Bud Dyruff, from the Cowen Ranch, who, because I waded bare-kneed into a warm little slough-end when the horses were having their noonday meal, assumed that I could be persuaded to wade with equal celerity into indiscriminate affection.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,064 ~ ~ ~
"Are you trying to make love to me?"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,670 ~ ~ ~
Then, when he's at his crankiest, he's apt to startle you by saying the divinest things point-blank in your face, and as likely as not, after treating you as he would a rather backward child of whom he rigidly disapproves, he'll make love to you and do it with a fine old Anglo-Saxon directness.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,326 ~ ~ ~
But I can see that he is deliberately and patiently making love to my children.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,015 ~ ~ ~
So Dinky-Dunk, who keeps saying in unexpected and intriguing ways that he can't live without me, is trying to make love to me as he did in the old days before he got salt-and-peppery above the ears.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 587 ~ ~ ~
Her hair was a rich raw sienna, and any man would have made love to her had she but carried an ear-trumpet.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,551 ~ ~ ~
He was a man who could make love charmingly, one who had been liberally educated.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,555 ~ ~ ~
To make love to a pretty girl was nothing to him, merely another passing incident.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,186 ~ ~ ~
For your sake I intend to cultivate even Mr. Denis Quirk, and to make love to that dear old woman."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,928 ~ ~ ~
He threw his scruples to the winds and made love in a feverish manner, regardless of the cost.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 229 ~ ~ ~
'Perhaps, after all, they are making love to each other; and if they are, I certainly ought to go out and sit with them.'
~ ~ ~ Sentence 259 ~ ~ ~
'Why should they sit together under the cedar tree like that unless they are making love?'
~ ~ ~ Sentence 760 ~ ~ ~
Could any one but he live at Bowshott and dress in shabby shooting clothes, and smoke cigarettes in a room where Charles I. made love, and wear hobnailed boots to go up and down a grand staircase?'
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,229 ~ ~ ~
Passing inside the house was the hall, with its big round tables by the fire, and beyond that was the library and his mother's drawing-room; while in the older wings of the house were the ballroom where Charles I. had banqueted, and the Sèvres sitting-room, so called from the china plaques let into the mantelpiece, where he had made love.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,516 ~ ~ ~
The young man who played the hero was a very fine fellow; and yet when I conceive _him_ making love to me as he did last night to Mrs. Colebrook, the notion seems really _too_ ludicrous!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,802 ~ ~ ~
I can't imagine being in love; but one thing is certain, I could never, never, never allow a horrid little rat like Lord Dereham to make love to me, to kiss me, nor, indeed, any man--oh, horror!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,805 ~ ~ ~
The idea of Molly--Cécile's double--marrying--worse still, making love, coquetting before his eyes, was intolerable to Adrian.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,344 ~ ~ ~
She shuddered at the recollection of that day in the little valley when he boldly made love to her.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,407 ~ ~ ~
Vividly she pictured him as he had looked lashing his way to her through the wildly crowding horse herd, determined, capable, masterful--and wondered vaguely what her answer would have been had he made love to her as Bethune had done?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,408 ~ ~ ~
She smiled at the thought of Vil Holland, the unsmiling, the outspoken, the self-sufficient Vil Holland making love!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,480 ~ ~ ~
The White Slaver haunts the excursion boat, makes love to the girl whose head is turned with silly notions about romantic courtships and marriages; he takes her to a Justice of the Peace or a "marrying parson" of the excursion resort type, and a ceremony is performed.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,753 ~ ~ ~
Are you making love to me?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,065 ~ ~ ~
He never had made love to her more definitely than on the morning after his interview with Dr. Morgan, but to herself she acknowledged that he admired her, and while she was not sure of his entertaining a more pronounced feeling, up to this time she had known, at least, that his eyes were only for her.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,071 ~ ~ ~
She didn't really want him to make love to her,--that was a notion altogether too unmaidenly,--but she did feel as if an expression of affection from _somebody_ would be very comforting.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,396 ~ ~ ~
When they became a more civilized people, they shone much more illustriously in arts and in arms, than in delicacy of sentiment and elegance of manners: hence we shall find, that their method of making love was more directed to compel the fair sex to a compliance with their wishes by charms and philtres, than to win them by the nameless assiduities and good offices of a lover.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 781 ~ ~ ~
Since she had known him, a course of reading, adopted at his suggestion, took her away from the more flowery and romantic pages, but in the old serial stories the folk had nothing to do but to make love to each other, with intervals for meals and rest; they were not restricted to evening hours; the whole day was at their service.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 268 ~ ~ ~
The warm blooded French people have ideas that differ widely from those of Americans in many respects, and it is nothing unusual to see a French couple making love in broad daylight with persons passing by on all sides, in one of these public parks.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,533 ~ ~ ~
Just imagine you're looking at a soldier, home from the Cuban war, making love to a giggling school-girl on a balcony.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,190 ~ ~ ~
Endued with that temper which is the origin of superstition in love as in religion,--which, in fact makes love itself a religion,--she not only does not utter an upbraiding, but nothing that Othello does or says, no outrage, no injustice, can tear away the charm with which her imagination had invested him, or impair her faith in his honor; "Would you had never seen him!" exclaims Emilia.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,215 ~ ~ ~
Take this, [_giving a jewel_, And carry it to that lordly Cæsar sent thee; There's a new love, a handsome one, a rich one,-- One that will hug his mind: bid him make love to it: Tell the ambitious broker this will suffer-- _Enter_ CÆSAR.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 301 ~ ~ ~
What's the good of marrying a pretty face for other men to make love to?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 623 ~ ~ ~
A child of the North, regarding a bewitching woman, thinks how nice it would be to make love to her, and wastes his time in wondering how he can do it.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 624 ~ ~ ~
A child of the South neither thinks nor wonders; he makes love straight away.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,199 ~ ~ ~
"I've always heard that a Frenchman makes love to every woman he meets."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,205 ~ ~ ~
"So, if I make love to you, it is but your due."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,381 ~ ~ ~
Still she was a woman, and Aristide, firm in his conviction that when it comes to love-making all women are the same, proceeded forthwith to make love to her.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,448 ~ ~ ~
When he wanted to make love to a woman, _pour tout de bon_, it would not be to Mrs. Ducksmith.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,479 ~ ~ ~
He scarcely waited for the heavy man's back to be turned to make love to her.
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