The 3,550 occurrences of whore

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WHORE Whore, v. t. Defn: To corrupt by lewd intercourse; to make a whore of; to debauch.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 695,620   ~   ~   ~

WHOREDOM Whore"dom, n. Etym: [OE.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 695,631   ~   ~   ~

WHOREMASTER Whore"mas'ter, n. 1.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 695,634   ~   ~   ~

One keeps or procures whores for others; a pimp; a procurer.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 695,635   ~   ~   ~

WHOREMASTERLY Whore"mas'ter*ly, a. Defn: Having the character of a whoremaster; lecherous; libidinous.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 695,636   ~   ~   ~

WHOREMONGER Whore"mon'ger, n. Defn: A whoremaster; a lecher; a man who frequents the society of whores.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 695,637   ~   ~   ~

WHORESON Whore"son, n. Defn: A bastard; colloquially, a low, scurvy fellow; -- used generally in contempt, or in coarse humor.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 695,640   ~   ~   ~

WHORISH Whor"ish, a. Defn: Resembling a whore in character or conduct; addicted to unlawful pleasures; incontinent; lewd; unchaste.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 226   ~   ~   ~

We live not in _Spain_, where all the Relations of the Family are oblig'd to vindicate a Whore: No, I would wound him in his most tender Part.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,774   ~   ~   ~

In this connection she also said that people called her a whore, or it seemed as if she were accused of not being married.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,809   ~   ~   ~

The distress was usually occasioned by an idea of injury to others, as when she cried over the fancied accusation of drowning her husband and mother; or in connection with accusations of herself, such as when she reported "They called me a whore."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,628   ~   ~   ~

[[Books-A-Million http://www.booksamillion.com/ncom/books?&isbn=0765319853]] "They're total whores," Ange said, spitting the word out.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,629   ~   ~   ~

"In fact, that's an insult to hardworking whores everywhere.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,643   ~   ~   ~

"You said it, they're whores."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,644   ~   ~   ~

"Yeah, but whores do it for the money.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 145   ~   ~   ~

The royal refugee our breed restores, With foreign courtiers, and with foreign whores: And carefully re-peopled us again, Throughout his lazy, long, lascivious reign, With such a blest and true-born English fry, As much illustrates our nobility.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 149   ~   ~   ~

French cooks, Scotch pedlars, and Italian whores, Were all made lords or lords' progenitors.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 249   ~   ~   ~

By th' first address they made beyond the seas, They're perjur'd in the most intense degrees; And without scruple for the time to come, May swear to all the kings in Christendom: Nay, truly did our kings consider all, They'd never let the clergy swear at all, Their politic allegiance they'd refuse, For whores and priests do never want excuse.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 303   ~   ~   ~

I keep the best seraglio in the nation, And hope in time to bring it into fashion; No brimstone whore need fear the lash from me, That part I'll leave to Brother Jefferey: Our gallants need not go abroad to Rome, I'll keep a whoring jubilee at home; Whoring's the darling of my inclination; An't I a magistrate for reformation?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 101   ~   ~   ~

She played the whore and lost her head.'

~   ~   ~   Sentence 152   ~   ~   ~

I had a pupil in the North----' 'She was a Howard, and the Howards are all whores,' the printer said, over the letter.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 771   ~   ~   ~

There were goldsmiths, woolstaplers, horse merchants, whore-masters, painters, musicians and vintners....

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,688   ~   ~   ~

The printer made a nervous stride to his printing stick, and, brandishing it in the air, poured out these words: 'Whores and harlots shall not stand in the sight of the godly.'

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,962   ~   ~   ~

And you may find a chaste whore before either.'

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,979   ~   ~   ~

And yet they would not hearken unto their judges, but they went a whoring after other gods, and bowed themselves unto them; and they turned quickly out of the way which their fathers walked in, obeying the commandments of the Lord; but they did not so..... And it came to pass, when the judge was dead, that they returned and corrupted themselves more than their fathers, in following other Gods to serve them, and to bow down unto them; they ceased not from their own doings, nor from their stubborn way."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,869   ~   ~   ~

Thus living continually in society, nay even in Taverns, and indulging himself, and being indulged by others, in every debauchery; drinking, whoring, gluttony, and ease; assuming a liberty of fiction, necessary perhaps to his wit, and often falling into falsity and lies, he seems to have set, by degrees, all sober reputation at defiance; and finding eternal resources in his wit, he borrows, shifts, defrauds, and even robs, without dishonour.-Laughter and approbation attend his greatest excesses; and being governed visibly by no settled bad principle or ill design, fun and humour account for and cover all.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,986   ~   ~   ~

These various occasions of expence,-servants, taverns, houses, and whores,-necessarily imply that _Falstaff_ must have had some funds which are not brought immediately under our notice.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,673   ~   ~   ~

From _A Whore_, Spenser Society Reprint of Folio of 1630, p. 272.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,903   ~   ~   ~

Eo nempe modo quo et olim _whorson_ dixerunt pro _son of a whore_.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 103   ~   ~   ~

[Pg 14] She who touches my arm and talks with me Is-who knows?-Helen of Sparta, Dryope, Laodamia.... And there are you A whore in Oxford Street.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 149   ~   ~   ~

Few don't gives high dragon bump tweddy far whores, thin godda."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 299   ~   ~   ~

"I am indeed," said I, "and thou art for my sake; but to be a whore, Amy!" and there I stopped.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 300   ~   ~   ~

"Dear madam," says Amy, "if I will starve for your sake, I will be a whore or anything for your sake; why, I would die for you if I were put to it."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 302   ~   ~   ~

But, however, Amy, you shall not be a whore to him, to oblige him to be kind to me; no, Amy, nor I won't be a whore to him, if he would give me much more than he is able to give me or do for me."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 402   ~   ~   ~

And, I must own, I am of the same mind; else it is in the power of a whore, after she has jilted and abandoned her husband, to confine him from the pleasure as well as convenience of a woman all the days of his life, which would be very unreasonable, and, as times go, not tolerable to all people; and the like on your side, madam."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 423   ~   ~   ~

"Well, Amy," says I, "the case is as you say, and I think verily I must yield to him; but then," said I, moved by conscience, "don't talk any more of your cant of its being lawful that I ought to marry again, and that he ought to marry again, and such stuff as that; 'tis all nonsense," says I, "Amy, there's nothing in it; let me hear no more of that, for if I yield, 'tis in vain to mince the matter, I am a whore, Amy; neither better nor worse, I assure you."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 454   ~   ~   ~

And thus, in gratitude for the favours I received from a man, was all sense of religion and duty to God, all regard to virtue and honour, given up at once, and we were to call one another man and wife, who, in the sense of the laws both of God and our country, were no more than two adulterers; in short, a whore and a rogue.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 472   ~   ~   ~

Nor was what followed more her own fault than mine, who led her almost into it at first, and quite into it at last; and this may be a farther testimony what a hardness of crime I was now arrived to, which was owing to the conviction, that was from the beginning upon me, that I was a whore, not a wife; nor could I ever frame my mouth to call him husband or to say "my husband" when I was speaking of him.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 507   ~   ~   ~

"Nay, you whore," says I, "you said, if I would put you to bed, you would with all your heart."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 516   ~   ~   ~

Had I looked upon myself as a wife, you cannot suppose I would have been willing to have let my husband lie with my maid, much less before my face, for I stood by all the while; but as I thought myself a whore, I cannot say but that it was something designed in my thoughts that my maid should be a whore too, and should not reproach me with it.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 517   ~   ~   ~

Amy, however, less vicious than I, was grievously out of sorts the next morning, and cried and took on most vehemently, that she was ruined and undone, and there was no pacifying her; she was a whore, a slut, and she was undone!

~   ~   ~   Sentence 521   ~   ~   ~

"A whore!" says I.

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"Well, and am not I a whore as well as you?"

~   ~   ~   Sentence 720   ~   ~   ~

I argued with myself that I could not be a cheat in anything that was esteemed sacred; that I could not be of one opinion, and then pretend myself to be of another; nor could I go to confession, who knew nothing of the manner of it, and should betray myself to the priest to be a Huguenot, and then might come into trouble; but, in short, though I was a whore, yet I was a Protestant whore, and could not act as if I was popish, upon any account whatsoever.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 767   ~   ~   ~

I, that knew what this carcase of mine had been but a few years before; how overwhelmed with grief, drowned in tears, frightened with the prospect of beggary, and surrounded with rags and fatherless children; that was pawning and selling the rags that covered me for a dinner, and sat on the ground despairing of help and expecting to be starved, till my children were snatched from me to be kept by the parish; I, that was after this a whore for bread, and, abandoning conscience and virtue, lived with another woman's husband; I, that was despised by all my relations, and my husband's too; I, that was left so entirely desolate, friendless, and helpless that I knew not how to get the least help to keep me from starving,--that I should be caressed by a prince, for the honour of having the scandalous use of my prostituted body, common before to his inferiors, and perhaps would not have denied one of his footmen but a little while before, if I could have got my bread by it.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 834   ~   ~   ~

I think I may say now that I lived indeed like a queen; or, if you will have me confess that my condition had still the reproach of a whore, I may say I was, sure, the queen of whores; for no woman was ever more valued or more caressed by a person of such quality only in the station of a mistress.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,039   ~   ~   ~

Had I been a daughter or a wife, of whom it might be said that he had a just concern in their instruction or improvement, it had been an admirable step; but all this to a whore; to one who he carried with him upon no account that could be rationally agreeable, and none but to gratify the meanest of human frailties--this was the wonder of it.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,041   ~   ~   ~

Whoring was, in a word, his darling crime, the worst excursion he made, for he was otherwise one of the most excellent persons in the world.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,158   ~   ~   ~

But the malice of his thoughts anticipated him, and the Dutch merchant was so good as to give me an account of his design, which, indeed, was wicked enough in its nature; but to me it would have been worse than otherwise it would to another, for, upon examination, I could not have proved myself to be the wife of the jeweller, so the suspicion might have been carried on with the better face; and then I should also have brought all his relations in England upon me, who, finding by the proceedings that I was not his wife, but a mistress, or, in English, a whore, would immediately have laid claim to the jewels, as I had owned them to be his.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,281   ~   ~   ~

I have been a whore to two men, and have lived a wretched, abominable life of vice and wickedness for fourteen years.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,359   ~   ~   ~

These were my wicked arguments for whoring, for I never set against them the difference another way--I may say, every other way; how that, first, a wife appears boldly and honourably with her husband, lives at home, and possesses his house, his servants, his equipages, and has a right to them all, and to call them her own; entertains his friends, owns his children, and has the return of duty and affection from them, as they are here her own, and claims upon his estate, by the custom of England, if he dies and leaves her a widow.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,360   ~   ~   ~

The whore skulks about in lodgings, is visited in the dark, disowned upon all occasions before God and man; is maintained, indeed, for a time, but is certainly condemned to be abandoned at last, and left to the miseries of fate and her own just disaster.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,364   ~   ~   ~

The opposite circumstances of a wife and whore are such and so many, and I have since seen the difference with such eyes, as I could dwell upon the subject a great while; but my business is history.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,466   ~   ~   ~

I, that was infinitely obliged to him before, began to talk to him as if I had balanced accounts with him now, and that the favour of lying with a whore was equal, not to the thousand pistoles only, but to all the debt I owed him for saving my life and all my effects.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,470   ~   ~   ~

For where is the man that cares to marry a whore, though of his own making?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,564   ~   ~   ~

He would have taken me as a wife, but would not entertain me as a whore.

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And was ever woman so stupid to choose to be a whore, where she might have been an honest wife?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,625   ~   ~   ~

This, with some other securities, made me a very handsome estate of above a thousand pounds a year; enough, one would think, to keep any woman in England from being a whore.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,681   ~   ~   ~

He applauded my way of managing my money, and told me I should soon be monstrous rich; but he neither knew or mistrusted that, with all this wealth, I was yet a whore, and was not averse to adding to my estate at the farther expense of my virtue.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,798   ~   ~   ~

For the common vice of all whores, I mean money, was out of the question, nay, even avarice itself seemed to be glutted; for, including what I had saved in reserving the interest of £14,000, which, as above, I had left to grow, and including some very good presents I had made to me in mere compliment upon these shining masquerading meetings, which I held up for about two years, and what I made of three years of the most glorious retreat, as I call it, that ever woman had, I had fully doubled my first substance, and had near £5000 in money which I kept at home, besides abundance of plate and jewels, which I had either given me or had bought to set myself out for public days.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,806   ~   ~   ~

"Ignorant creature!" said I to myself, considering him as a lord, "was there ever woman in the world that could stoop to the baseness of being a whore, and was above taking the reward of her vice!

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,963   ~   ~   ~

For now I began not to be sick of his lordship only, but really I began to be sick of the vice; and as I had good leisure now to divert and enjoy myself in the world as much as it was possible for any woman to do that ever lived in it, so I found that my judgment began to prevail upon me to fix my delight upon nobler objects than I had formerly done, and the very beginning of this brought some just reflections upon me relating to things past, and to the former manner of my living; and though there was not the least hint in all this from what may be called religion or conscience, and far from anything of repentance, or anything that was akin to it, especially at first, yet the sense of things, and the knowledge I had of the world, and the vast variety of scenes that I had acted my part in, began to work upon my senses, and it came so very strong upon my mind one morning when I had been lying awake some time in my bed, as if somebody had asked me the question, What was I a whore for now?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,966   ~   ~   ~

But not to dwell upon that now; this was a pretence, and here was something to be said, though I acknowledge it ought not to have been sufficient to me at all; but, I say, to leave that, all this was out of doors; the devil himself could not form one argument, or put one reason into my head now, that could serve for an answer--no, not so much as a pretended answer to this question, why I should be a whore now.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,971   ~   ~   ~

But this objection would now serve no longer, for my lord had in some sort broke his engagements (I won't call it honour again) with me, and had so far slighted me as fairly to justify my entire quitting of him now; and so, as the objection was fully answered, the question remained still unanswered, Why am I a whore now?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,972   ~   ~   ~

Nor indeed had I anything to say for myself, even to myself; I could not without blushing, as wicked as I was, answer that I loved it for the sake of the vice, and that I delighted in being a whore, as such; I say, I could not say this, even to myself, and all alone, nor indeed would it have been true.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,973   ~   ~   ~

I was never able, in justice and with truth, to say I was so wicked as that; but as necessity first debauched me, and poverty made me a whore at the beginning, so excess of avarice for getting money and excess of vanity continued me in the crime, not being able to resist the flatteries of great persons; being called the finest woman in France; being caressed by a prince; and afterwards, I had pride enough to expect and folly enough to believe, though indeed without ground, by a great monarch.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,977   ~   ~   ~

What am I a whore for now?"

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,015   ~   ~   ~

"Why, prithee, Amy," says I, "what will my children say to themselves, and to one another, when they find their mother, however rich she may be, is at best but a whore, a common whore?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,016   ~   ~   ~

And as for acquaintance, prithee, Amy, what sober lady or what family of any character will visit or be acquainted with a whore?"

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,573   ~   ~   ~

This we picked out of the girl's discourse, that is to say, Amy did, at several times; but it all consisted of broken fragments of stories, such as the girl herself had heard so long ago, that she herself could make very little of it; only that in the main, that her mother had played the whore; had gone away with the gentleman that was landlord of the house; that he married her; that she went into France.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,240   ~   ~   ~

_Quaker._ As thou intendest to stay here to-morrow, to see the things which thou callest antiquities, and which are more properly named the relics of the Whore of Babylon; suppose thou wert to send Thomas, who at thy command followeth after us, to the place called Dover, to inquire whether such a young woman has been inquiring for thee.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,502   ~   ~   ~

You scrupled to be happily married to me, and soon after came to England, and was a reputed whore to any nobleman that would come up to your price, and lived with one a considerable time, and was taken by several people to be his lawful wife.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,504   ~   ~   ~

I must say an inhuman false-hearted whore, one that had not tenderness enough to own her own children, and has too little virtue, in my mind, to make a good wife.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,649   ~   ~   ~

no, not in the least; for if you ever mention anything of it, the title, as well as all the estate, will go to another branch of my family, and you will then be left to starve in good earnest, without having the least glimpse of hope to better your fortune; for," added he, "it is not very probable that you will be courted for a wife by any man of substance at these years; so if you have a mind to make yourself easy in your present circumstances, you must rest contented with what I have left you, and not prove yourself a whore to ruin your child, in whose power it will be to provide for you in a handsome manner, provided you behave yourself with that respect to him and me as you ought to do; for if any words arise about what I have done, I shall make a fresh will, and, as the laws of this nation will give me liberty, cut you off with a shilling."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 76   ~   ~   ~

A conclave of whores telling the truth, and of Romish Priests, could alone settle the point.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 789   ~   ~   ~

My first frig.--My godfather.--Meditations on copulation.-- Male and female aromas.--Maid and gardener.--My father dies.--A wet dream.--Bilked by a whore.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 884   ~   ~   ~

"She is a whore," said Fred, "and will let us feel her if we pay her."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,230   ~   ~   ~

Said he, talking to me next day, "She is jolly ugly, but she's good enough for a feel, I felt her cunt last night, and think she has been fucked (he thought that of every girl), her mother's a rum old gal too, she will let you meet a girl at her cottage, not whores, you know, but if they are respectable."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,798   ~   ~   ~

At the Manor house.--Fred's amours.--Sarah and Mary.--What drink and money does.--My second virgin.--My first whore.-- Double fucking.--Gamahucking.--Minette.--A belly up and down.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,756   ~   ~   ~

She had an eye, and manner which fascinated me, her dress was quite elegant, as unlike the French women of Regen street of the present day, as a duchess is to a milkmaid; but she was the ordinary French whore of the day, of whom there were but few in London (there was no railway to Paris); and who were exclusively supported by gentlemen at the West-End.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,842   ~   ~   ~

She once said to me laughing, "I am a born whore, for I like it, and like to see a man amuse himself with me."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,634   ~   ~   ~

"I am not a whore," said Louise taking cheek.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,636   ~   ~   ~

"Say I am a whore, and I'll hit you," said Louise going up to her.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,708   ~   ~   ~

"Then you are a fool, you can't be sure of one woman's cunt if you are not with her always, but two together are sure to make a couple of whores,--no wonder your tin goes so fast."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,857   ~   ~   ~

She was delighted, turned round and round, opened her thighs, pulled open her cunt, exposed herself with the freedom of a French whore, and by the time I had seen all my prick was at fever heat, and I fucked her.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,264   ~   ~   ~

The old foreman had said to me, "She ha been the biggest whore in the parish, I bet that there beant a man but what have had she when she were young.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,267   ~   ~   ~

She was as strong as a horse, if no one were handy, she would groom a horse, was often driving a farm-cart, and had the reputation of having whored since she was fifteen years of age.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,363   ~   ~   ~

Sure enough in two or three days there was Molly, looking as fresh as a daisy, and as modest as a whore at a christening.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,501   ~   ~   ~

She could not evade it, Molly had turned whore.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,503   ~   ~   ~

A woman who takes to whoring takes to lying.

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