The 3,550 occurrences of whore
View the definition of "whore" on The Online Slang Dictionary
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~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,624 ~ ~ ~
In his mind she was the Âpretty little college whore', and the very strength of his desire for her only intensified his wish to wound her, as he had been wounded, to punish and destroy her, as his love had been destroyed.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,850 ~ ~ ~
'You sorry Asian WHORE!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,866 ~ ~ ~
You whore.'
~ ~ ~ Sentence 6,186 ~ ~ ~
'On a good day all they're required to do is give their bodies to pawing, drooling idiots, who in their half-assed passion call them mother', cheap whore', or the name of some long-lost lover.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 6,204 ~ ~ ~
While the jagged man the police had cuffed and were dragging away, screamed in bursts of occasional coherence, 'All women are whores!'
~ ~ ~ Sentence 696 ~ ~ ~
The chief demanded upon what grounds the soldier denied it: "Because," said the soldier, "the women of your country are all whores, and the men all get drunk with bouza, araky, and other forbidden liquors, which you make out of durra and dates;" and turning to me, he demanded "whether he was not right?"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,593 ~ ~ ~
Vengeaunce must fall on thee, thow filthie whore Of Babilon, thow breaker of Christ's fold, That from achorns, and from the water colde, Art riche become with making many poore.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 219 ~ ~ ~
But it is a shameful part, and full of infidelity, that we see every whore used in the churches of our adversaries, not only in that they will have innumerable sorts of mediators, and that utterly without the authority of God's word (so that, as Jeremy saith, "The saints be now as many in number, or rather above the number of the cities;" and poor men cannot tell to which saint it were best to turn them first; and though there be so many as they cannot be told, yet every one of them hath his peculiar duty and office assigned unto him of these folks, what thing they ought to ask, what to give, and what to bring to pass): but besides this also, in that they do not only wickedly, but also shamefully, call upon the Blessed Virgin, Christ's mother, to have her remember that she is the mother, and to command her Son, and to use a mother's authority over Him.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 271 ~ ~ ~
Hackney, a person or thing let out for promiscuous use, _e.g._, a horse, a whore, a literary drudge.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 292 ~ ~ ~
abbess = bawd; nun = whore, and so forth.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 12,196 ~ ~ ~
6: 'And the soul that turneth after such as have familiar spirits, and after wizards, to go a-whoring after them, I will set my face against that soul, and will cut him off from among his people.'
~ ~ ~ Sentence 25,989 ~ ~ ~
23:17: "There shall be no whore among the daughters of Israel, nor whoremonger among the sons of Israel"; and the prohibition against unnatural sins, according to Lev.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,725 ~ ~ ~
Prop of sea-waves' fire,[38] thy fretting Cannot cast a weight on us, Warriors wight; yes, wolf and eagle Willingly I feed to-day; Carline thrust into the ingle, Or a tramping whore, art thou; Lord of skates that skim the sea-belt,[39] Odin's mocking cup[40] I mix.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,548 ~ ~ ~
On the 1st of June, 1800, Earl St. Vincent, who had assumed the command a short time before, detached Sir Edward Pellew, with seven sail of the line, and some smaller vessels, to Quiberon Bay, whore they were to land five thousand troops under General Maitland to assist the royalists.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,035 ~ ~ ~
My gudesire uttered mony thanks, and was about to retire, when Sir Robert roared aloud, "Stop, though, thou sack-doudling son of a whore!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 471 ~ ~ ~
And I was the last to go in, and just as I was entering, the boldest and nearest of the enemy clutched at my love's hair in my helm, shouting out quite loud, 'Whore's hair for John the goldsmith!'
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,174 ~ ~ ~
Whore England is the great sea carrier for Europe, Canada has not wakened up to establish enough sea carriers for her own needs.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 249 ~ ~ ~
Now, if the offspring of that dear old mother is a bastard, then she is nothing more nor less than a common whore, and you cannot arrive at any other rational conclusion.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 261 ~ ~ ~
Arouse, ye men and women of America, or else the time will come when you will not be permitted to make a protest; when your wives and mothers are declared whores by Catholicism, and your fathers and brothers are declared whore-mongers and your children bastards!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 595 ~ ~ ~
It is resolved, that no compositions shall be made, nor licences granted for swearing, under a notion of applying the money to pious uses; a practice so scandalous as is fit only for the see of Rome, where the money arising from whoring licences is applied ad propagandam fidem : And to the shame of Smock-alley, and of all Protestant whores, (especially those who live under the light of the Gospel-ministry) be it spoken, a whore in Rome never lies down, but she hopes it will be the means of converting some poor heathen, or heretic.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 662 ~ ~ ~
And therefore although in compliance with my friends, I resolve to go to the gallows after the usual manner, kneeling, with a book in my hand, and my eyes lift up; yet I shall feel no more devotion in my heart than I have observed in some of my comrades, who have been drunk among common whores the very night before their execution.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 667 ~ ~ ~
Thirdly, Nothing is more dangerous to idle young fellows, than the company of those odious common whores we frequent, and of which this town is full: These wretches put us upon all mischief to feed their lusts and extravagancies: They are ten times more bloody and cruel than men; their advice is always not to spare if we are pursued; they get drunk with us, and are common to us all; and yet, if they can get anything by it, are sure to be our betrayers.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 675 ~ ~ ~
Although we are generally so corrupted from our childhood, as to have no sense of goodness; yet something heavy always hangs about us, I know not what it is, that we are never easy till we are half drunk among our whores and companions; nor sleep sound, unless we drink longer than we can stand.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 678 ~ ~ ~
Every man among us keeps his particular whore, who is however common to us all, when we have a mind to change.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 685 ~ ~ ~
And out of this we must find clothes for our whores, besides treating them from morning to night; who, in requital, reward us with nothing but treachery and the pox.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 687 ~ ~ ~
If anything in this world be like hell, as I have heard it described by our clergy; the truest picture of it must be in the back-room of one of our alehouses at midnight; where a crew of robbers and their whores are met together after a booty, and are beginning to grow drunk, from which time, until they are past their senses, is such a continued horrible noise of cursing, blasphemy, lewdness, scurrility, and brutish behaviour; such roaring and confusion, such a clatter of mugs and pots at each other's heads, that Bedlam, in comparison, is a sober and orderly place: At last they all tumble from their stools and benches, and sleep away the rest of the night; and generally the landlord or his wife, or some other whore who has a stronger head than the rest, picks their pockets before they wake.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 951 ~ ~ ~
[73] Yet, in the midst of this my situation, I cannot but have some pity for this deluded man, to cast himself away on an infamous creature, who, whatever she pretendeth, I can prove, would at this very minute rather be a whore to a certain great man, that shall be nameless, if she might have her will.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,268 ~ ~ ~
For instance; let any man seriously consider what numbers there are of incurable fools, incurable knaves, incurable scolds, incurable scribblers, (besides myself,) incurable coxcombs, incurable infidels, incurable liars, incurable whores, in all places of public resort:-not to mention the incurably vain, incurably envious, incurably proud, incurably affected, incurably impertinent, and ten thousand other incurables, which I must of necessity pass over in silence, lest I should swell this essay into a volume.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,327 ~ ~ ~
As to the remaining incurables, we may reasonably conclude, that they bear at least an equal proportion to those already mentioned; but with regard to the incurable whores in this kingdom, I must particularly observe, that such of them as are public, and make it their profession, have proper hospitals for their reception already, if we could find magistrates without passions, or officers without an incurable itch to a bribe.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,358 ~ ~ ~
And my reason for this proposal is; because considerable estates, which probably would be squandered away among hounds, horses, whores, sharpers, surgeons, tailors, pimps, masquerades, or architects, if left to the management of such incurables; would, by this means, become of some real use, both to the public and themselves.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,578 ~ ~ ~
If some of the out-parishes be overburthened with poor, the reason must be, that the greatest part of those poor are strollers from the country, who nestle themselves where they can find the cheapest lodgings, and from thence infest every part of the town, out of which they ought to be whipped as a most insufferable nuisance, being nothing else but a profligate clan of thieves, drunkards, heathens, and whore-mongers, fitter to be rooted out of the face of the earth, than suffered to levy a vast annual tax upon the city, which shares too deep in the public miseries, brought on us by the oppressions we lye under from our neighbours, our brethren, our countrymen, our fellow protestants, and fellow subjects.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 255 ~ ~ ~
The same person also spoke out and said that Babylon is the Church in her ministers, and that the Great Whore is the Church in her worship, &c.; so that with him there was an end of ministers and churches and ordinations altogether.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 741 ~ ~ ~
That a little before Christmas last, this Examinates Daughter hauing been to helpe _Richard Baldwyns_ Folkes at the Mill: This Examinates Daughter did bid her this Examinate goe to the sayd _Baldwyns_ house, and aske him some thing for her helping of his Folkes at the Mill, (as aforesaid:) and in this Examinates going to the said _Baldwyns_ house, and neere to the sayd house, she mette with the said _Richard Baldwyn_; Which _Baldwyn_ sayd to this Examinate, and the said _Alizon Deuice_[B3_a_3] (who at that time ledde this Examinate, being blinde) get out of my ground Whores and Witches, I will burne the one of you, and hang the other.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,196 ~ ~ ~
This, then, is the state in which we leave the two sentimental lovers,--the one consoling herself with brandy, the other wheedling and whining; and, as Swift describes the progress of an intrigue in some respects similar, which he calls "The Progress of Love," whereas this is the Progress of Sentiment, "They keep at Staines the Old Blue Boar, Are cat and dog, and rogue and whore."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,485 ~ ~ ~
Then into the hall of the Niblungs go the battle-staying earls, And they cast the spoil in the midmost; the webs of the out-sea pearls, And the gold-enwoven purple that on hated kings was bright; Fair jewelled swords accursèd that never flashed in fight; Crowns of old kings of battle that dastards dared to wear; Great golden shields dishonoured, and the traitors' battle-gear; Chains of the evil judges, and the false accusers' rings, And the cloud-wrought silken raiment of the cruel whores of kings.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,313 ~ ~ ~
No--stretch a point to catch a plack; [small coin] Abuse a brother to his back; Steal thro' the winnock frae a whore, [window from] But point the rake that takes the door: * * * * * Be to the poor like ony whunstane, [any whinstone] And haud their noses to the grunstane; [hold, grindstone] Ply ev'ry art o' legal thieving; No matter--stick to sound believing.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,579 ~ ~ ~
There, at Vienna, or Versailles, He rives his father's auld entails; [splits] Or by Madrid he takes the rout, To thrum guitars and fecht wi' nowt; [fight with bulls] Or down Italian vista startles, [courses] Whore-hunting amang groves o' myrtles; Then bouses drumly German water, [muddy] To make himsel' look fair and fatter, And clear the consequential sorrows, Love-gifts of Carnival signoras.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,596 ~ ~ ~
The men cast out in party matches, [quarrel] Then sowther a' in deep debauches: [solder] Ae night they're mad wi' drink and whoring, [One] Neist day their life is past enduring.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,622 ~ ~ ~
Here stands a shed to fend the show'rs, [keep off] An' screen our country gentry; There racer Jess an' twa-three whores Are blinkin' at the entry.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,092 ~ ~ ~
{295c} Lubbeny, the whore.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,278 ~ ~ ~
No--stretch a point to catch a plack; Abuse a brother to his back; Steal thro' a winnock frae a whore, But point the rake that taks the door; Be to the poor like onie whunstane, And haud their noses to the grunstane, Ply ev'ry art o' legal thieving; No matter--stick to sound believing.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,902 ~ ~ ~
From those drear solitudes and frowsy cells, Where infamy with sad repentance dwells; Where turnkeys make the jealous portal fast, And deal from iron hands the spare repast; Where truant 'prentices, yet young in sin, Blush at the curious stranger peeping in; Where strumpets, relics of the drunken roar, Resolve to drink, nay, half to whore, no more; Where tiny thieves not destin'd yet to swing, Beat hemp for others, riper for the string: From these dire scenes my wretched lines I date, To tell Maria her Esopus' fate.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 15,752 ~ ~ ~
Remember me to Maggy my wife, The neist time ye gang o'er the moor, Tell her she staw the bishop's mare, Tell her she was the bishop's whore.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 15,787 ~ ~ ~
This song is the composition of a Jean Glover, a girl who was not only a whore, but also a thief; and in one or other character has visited most of the Correction Houses in the West.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 571 ~ ~ ~
And if at last his Nature can reform, A weary grown of Loves tumultuous storm, 'Tis Ages Fault, not His; of pow'r bereft, He left not Whoring, but of that was left.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 699 ~ ~ ~
As from a Cubick Power, or Three-fold Might, Roots much expand, as Authors prove aright; But of such Managements we'll little say, Or shamm'd Intrigues, for Fame left to convey; Which may by peeping through a Gown-mans Sleeve, Tell such grave Tales, Men cannot well believe: With what for Plots and Trials has been done, As Whores depos'd, before away they run; All which was well discern'd by numerous Sense, Before the Doctors py'd Intelligence, Who, with some Motley Lawyers, took much care To gain the _Caput_ of this Knowing Peer; When after so much Noise, and nothing prov'd, Heaven thank'd, to Freedom he's at last remov'd, Leaving a Low-Bridge _Cerberus_ to try In what Clerks Pate his monstrous Fee does lie; Or by the help of _Tory-Roger_ tell How Sacred Gain-Prerogativ'd should spell.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 397 ~ ~ ~
Men fattened on our substance cry to us: "Be persuaded that a she-ass has spoken; believe that a fish has swallowed a man and has given him up at the end of three days safe and sound on the shore; have no doubt that the God of the universe ordered one Jewish prophet to eat excrement (Ezekiel), and another prophet to buy two whores and to make with them sons of whoredom (Hosea).
~ ~ ~ Sentence 247 ~ ~ ~
He called him rascal, and whore-monger, and drunkard, and many other names, which made those who were in the chamber laugh long and loud; but his wife could not join in the mirth, her face being pressed to the side of her new friend.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 248 ~ ~ ~
"Ha!" said the husband, "Master whore-monger, you have well hidden from me this good cheer; but, by my faith, though I was not at the feast, you must show me the bride."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 272 ~ ~ ~
are you still there you rascally whore-monger?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,526 ~ ~ ~
"Wicked whore that you are!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,535 ~ ~ ~
That's a nice salutation, to call me a whore!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,738 ~ ~ ~
Her husband grew angry, and cried, "You lie, you whore!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,151 ~ ~ ~
"And catch your quartain fever!" said the curé, "beastly dirty, ill-mannered whore that you are!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,222 ~ ~ ~
The good lord saw and knew that his wife was unfaithful, and inclined to play the whore, but the sense that God had given him, told him that there was no remedy except to hold his tongue or die, for he had often both seen and read that nothing would cure a woman of that complaint.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,400 ~ ~ ~
Puttaccia!_" (Whore!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,401 ~ ~ ~
Whore!)
~ ~ ~ Sentence 21,503 ~ ~ ~
4] "the whore's is a shameful trade in what she does but not in what she takes," and consequently what she takes she possesses lawfully.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 35,498 ~ ~ ~
23:17, says: "This is a prohibition against going with whores, whose vileness is venial."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,850 ~ ~ ~
But theirs was Love in which the Mind delights To lose itself, when the old world grows dull, And we are sick of its hack sounds and sights, Intrigues, adventures of the common school, Its petty passions, marriages, and flights, Where Hymen's torch but brands one strumpet more, Whose husband only knows her not a whore.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,977 ~ ~ ~
[fv] _Because he kept them wrapt up in his closet, he_ _Ruled fair wives and twelve hundred whores, unseen,_ _More easily than Christian kings one queen_.--[MS.]
~ ~ ~ Sentence 6,933 ~ ~ ~
They are young, but know not Youth--it is anticipated; Handsome but wasted, rich without a sou;[lc] Their vigour in a thousand arms is dissipated; Their cash comes _from_, their wealth goes _to_ a Jew; Both senates see their nightly votes participated Between the Tyrant's and the Tribunes' crew; And having voted, dined, drunk, gamed, and whored, The family vault receives another Lord.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 644 ~ ~ ~
When flatter'd crimes of a licentious age Reproach our silence, and demand our rage; When purchas'd follies, from each distant land, Like arts, improve in Britain's skilful hand; When the law shows her teeth, but dares not bite, And south sea treasures are not brought to light; When churchmen scripture for the classics quit, Polite apostates from God's grace to wit; When men grow great from their revenue spent, And fly from bailiffs into parliament; When dying sinners, to blot out their score, Bequeath the church the leavings of a whore; To chafe our spleen, when themes like these increase, Shall panegyric reign, and censure cease?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 660 ~ ~ ~
The pimp is proud to see So many like himself in high degree: The whore is proud her beauties are the dread Of peevish virtue, and the marriage-bed; And the brib'd cuckold, like crown'd victims born To slaughter, glories in his gilded horn.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 934 ~ ~ ~
Bathyllus, in the winter of threescore, Belies his innocence, and keeps a whore.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,005 ~ ~ ~
Fix'd is the fate of whores and fiddle-strings!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,060 ~ ~ ~
What foe to verse without compassion hears, What cruel prose-man can refrain from tears, When the poor muse, for less than half a crown, A prostitute on every bulk in town, With other whores undone, tho' not in print, Clubs credit for Geneva in the mint?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,748 ~ ~ ~
Evangelical freedom had now arrived at the point whore its champions first took a man's life and then his character, merely for writing a lampoon!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 6,250 ~ ~ ~
A house of penitent whores.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,589 ~ ~ ~
Yes, there was a smudge of smoke rising behind Twin-face; people should be more careful whore they dropped matches in an unseasonably hot spring like this--and Harrigan's sneer for the boy who had come, wonder-eyed, out of the wilderness and looked upon the picture-thing in kilted velvet which she had been was certainly squandered viciousness now.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 106 ~ ~ ~
And now, in crowds, press'd through the yielding doors, High Lords, deep Statesmen, Dutchesses, and Whores; All ranks and stations, Publicans and Peers, Grooms, Lawyers, Fiddlers, Bawds, and Auctioneers; Prudes and Coquettes, the Ugly and the Fair, The Pert, the Prim, the Dull, the Debonnair; The Weak, the Strong, the Humble and the Proud, All help'd to form the motley, mingled Crowd.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 117 ~ ~ ~
Old powerless _S----_ still essay'd to charm The Whore that dangled on the Dotard's arm.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 827 ~ ~ ~
Seeing that the names of delinquents could be better learned through the Principals of Houses, who moved continually among their associates, it was determined that every Principal, resident or acting, as well of Halls as of Chambers, should, at the beginning of every year, within fifteen days or sooner, as should seem fit to the Chancellor and Proctors, come and make corporal oath, that if they knew of any of their society holding such assemblies, or consenting with those who held them, or commonly and often naming different nations with evil zeal, or disturbing the peace of the University, or practising the art of bucklery, or keeping a whore in his house, or bearing arms or in any way promoting discord between Northerns and Southerns, he should within three days inform the Chancellor or one of the Proctors, and all such disturbers of the peace were to be punished with imprisonment.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,155 ~ ~ ~
"{13} Joseph is strangely described:-- "Whatever this oulde man that heare is, Take heede howe his head is whore, His beirde is like a buske of breyers, With a pound of heaire about his mouth and more.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,616 ~ ~ ~
He is the Lord of lords, and King of kings, He can unite kings and kingdoms, and give them one mind also to destroy the whore, and be her utter ruin.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,567 ~ ~ ~
We upper ones, write, read and work ourselves to death, offer to ⊙ our health, fame and fortune, whilst these gentlemen indulge their weaknesses, go a whoring, cause scandals and yet are Areopagites and want to know about everything.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 8,607 ~ ~ ~
Robert Grislet paid twenty marks of silver, that the king would help him against the earl of Mortaigne in a certain plea: Robert de Cundet gave thirty marks of silver, that the king would bring him to an accord with the bishop of Lincoln; Ralph de Bréckham gave a hawk, that the king would protect him; and this is a very frequent reason for payments; John, son of Ordgar, gave a Norway hawk, to have the king's request to the king of Norway to let him have his brother Godard's chattels; Richard de Neville gave twenty palfreys to obtain the king's request to Isolda Bisset, that she should take him for a husband; Roger Fitz-Walter gave three good palfreys to have the king's letter to Roger Bertram's mother, that she should marry him; Eling the dean paid one hundred marks, that his whore and his children might be let out upon bail; the bishop of Winchester gave one tun of good wine for his not putting the king in mind to give a girdle to the countess of Albemarle; Robert de Veaux gave five of the best palfreys, that the king would hold his tongue about Henry Pinel's wife.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,843 ~ ~ ~
They denominated the pope Antichrist, called his communion the scarlet whore, and gave to Rome the appellation of Babylon; expressions which, however applied, were to be found in Scripture, and which were better calculated to operate on the multitude than the most solid arguments.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,986 ~ ~ ~
It may not be unworthy of remark, that Coke, in the trial of Mrs. Turner, told her that she was guilty of the seven deadly sins: she was a whore, a bawd, a sorcerer, a witch, a Papist, a felon, and a murderer.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,681 ~ ~ ~
Sir John replied, "that to the world they seemed to be such as would not swear, whore, or be drunk; out they would lie, cozen, and deceive; that they would frequently hear two sermons a day, and repeat them too, and that some, times they would fast all day long."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,481 ~ ~ ~
Grimstone, a popular member, called him, in the house, the very pander and broker to the whore of Babylon.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 15,770 ~ ~ ~
The Prussians immediately cannonaded the enemy's cavalry, who received it with resolution, having on their right hand a village, and on their left a wood whore they had intrenched themselves.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 17,543 ~ ~ ~
That is what Maître Jean d'Estivet thought, for he flew into a violent rage: "Whore!" he cried, "it is thine own doing; thou hast eaten herrings and other things which have made thee ill." "I have not," she answered.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 17,902 ~ ~ ~
"Rascal," he said, "what possesses thee to allow an excommunicated whore to approach a church without permission?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,123 ~ ~ ~
Then how will you join in the hallelujahs of heaven; for God's judgments are the themes of thanksgiving and praise from saints and angels there, and this is their song: "_Hallelujah, salvation, and glory, and honor, and power, unto the Lord, our God, for true and righteous are his judgments; for he hath judged the great whore, which did corrupt the earth with her fornication, and hath avenged the blood of his servants at her hands.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 303 ~ ~ ~
[104]_Thou shalt not bring the hire of a whore, or the price of a dog, into the house of the Lord thy God for any vow: for both these are an abomination to the Lord thy God._ To conclude: The Dog, in Egypt, was undoubtedly called Cahen, and Cohen; a title by which many other animals, and even vegetables, were honoured, on account of their being consecrated to some Deity.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 492 ~ ~ ~
purely; very we Purlan, a. purely clean Puro, v. to purify, to cleanse Purol, a. purifying, cleansing Puten, n. a whore, a harlot Puteindra, n. whoredom Puteindy, n. bawdy house Puteinig, a. whorish, adulterous Puteinio, v. to go a whoring Puteiniol, a. meretricious Puteiniwr, n. a whoremonger Pw, n. a tendency to put off Pwca, n. a hobgoblin, a fiend Pwci, n. a hobgoblin, a goblin Pwd, n. a rot; a rot in sheep Pwdr, a. rotten, corrupt Pwff, n. a puff, a sharp blast Pwfflo, v. to come in puffs Pwg, n. what pushes or swells out Pwng, n. a cluster, a crop Pwngiad, n. a teeming Pwngo, v. to teem; to cluster Pwngol, a. teeming; clustering Pwl, a. blunt, obtuse; dull Pwll, n. a pool; a puddle Pwm, n. tendency to swell out Pwmp, n. a round mass, a lump Pwmpio, v. to thurap, to bang, v. to boss, to knob Pwmplog, a. bossed knobbed Pwn, n. a pack; burden Pwnc, n. point, subject Pwniad, n. a burdening Pwnio, v. to burden; to bang Pwnt, n. aggregate; a reservoir Pwr, n. what extends; a worm Pwsach, n. a loud outcry Pwt, n. any short thing Pwtan, n. a squat female Pwtiad, n. a butting, a poking Pwtian, v. to keep poking Pwtro, v. to push, to poke Pwtwn, n. a liquor; whiskey Pwtyn, n. a short round body Pwy, n. a beat; a butt: adv.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 664 ~ ~ ~
In another drama, Ford's masterpiece, "'Tis Pity She's a Whore," which revolves around the incestuous love of Giovanni for his sister Annabella, we are compelled either to turn away in horror, or to seek the mysterious excuse in its habitual haunt on the shore of the gulf.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,574 ~ ~ ~
To sell the Ojo[u]san for a street whore, for her to spend her life in such vile servitude; she by whose kindness this household has lived.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,648 ~ ~ ~
Continued the old man--"Iémon with his whore is fast destroying Tamiya by riot and drinking.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,006 ~ ~ ~
Kwaiba sold her for a street whore.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 7,685 ~ ~ ~
A _do[u]shin_ placed the document of the confession of the whores so that Iémon had no difficulty in ascertaining its title.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,424 ~ ~ ~
Thus before my very eyes he would dally with his whore and make me cuckold.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,324 ~ ~ ~
Thus many of these villainous characters, whores and fire bugs, find field for their offenses.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 8,346 ~ ~ ~
22:20, 21): "If... virginity be not found in the damsel... the men of the city shall stone her to death, and she shall die; because she hath done a wicked thing in Israel, to play the whore in her father's house."
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