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Asked on May 8, 2021 in Word choice.
I suggest Lothario defined by Wikipedia defined as an unscrupulous seducer of women.
An old and famous character in Nicholas Rowe’s tragedy The Fair Penitent Dictionary.
At iCom, add the definitions rake, libertine and synonyms Romeo, Don Juan, Casanova, etc. No error made.
The Office Romeo is a well-worn term, but I don’t often hear Romeo on its own.
To my ear, Don Juan and Casanova have become rather quaint ‘literary’ clichu00e9s much overused by the mass-media, but somehow Lothario still seems to have a certain freshness. Is it possible to use it to gauge the extent of your attention rather than getting all your
voice and grammar from TV dramas?
- 620522 views
- 515 answers
- 228269 votes
-
Asked on May 8, 2021 in Word choice.
Even if finally isn’t explicitly specified, it’s usually implied… “I…
finally got around to “?
If it’s impossible, don’t
get around to something after shoud know that something is to do, whileyou’ve planned to do it for something long time. What should you do it for?
- 611044 views
- 170 answers
- 225250 votes
-
Asked on May 8, 2021 in Word choice.
I suggest Lothario defined by Wikipedia defined as an unscrupulous seducer of women.
An old and famous character in Nicholas Rowe’s tragedy The Fair Penitent Dictionary.
At iCom, add the definitions rake, libertine and synonyms Romeo, Don Juan, Casanova, etc. No error made.
The Office Romeo is a well-worn term, but I don’t often hear Romeo on its own.
To my ear, Don Juan and Casanova have become rather quaint ‘literary’ clichu00e9s much overused by the mass-media, but somehow Lothario still seems to have a certain freshness. Is it possible to use it to gauge the extent of your attention rather than getting all your
voice and grammar from TV dramas?
- 620522 views
- 515 answers
- 228269 votes
-
Asked on May 8, 2021 in Word choice.
I suggest Lothario defined by Wikipedia defined as an unscrupulous seducer of women.
An old and famous character in Nicholas Rowe’s tragedy The Fair Penitent Dictionary.
At iCom, add the definitions rake, libertine and synonyms Romeo, Don Juan, Casanova, etc. No error made.
The Office Romeo is a well-worn term, but I don’t often hear Romeo on its own.
To my ear, Don Juan and Casanova have become rather quaint ‘literary’ clichu00e9s much overused by the mass-media, but somehow Lothario still seems to have a certain freshness. Is it possible to use it to gauge the extent of your attention rather than getting all your
voice and grammar from TV dramas?
- 620522 views
- 515 answers
- 228269 votes
-
Asked on May 8, 2021 in Word choice.
I suggest Lothario defined by Wikipedia defined as an unscrupulous seducer of women.
An old and famous character in Nicholas Rowe’s tragedy The Fair Penitent Dictionary.
At iCom, add the definitions rake, libertine and synonyms Romeo, Don Juan, Casanova, etc. No error made.
The Office Romeo is a well-worn term, but I don’t often hear Romeo on its own.
To my ear, Don Juan and Casanova have become rather quaint ‘literary’ clichu00e9s much overused by the mass-media, but somehow Lothario still seems to have a certain freshness. Is it possible to use it to gauge the extent of your attention rather than getting all your
voice and grammar from TV dramas?
- 620522 views
- 515 answers
- 228269 votes
-
Asked on May 8, 2021 in Word choice.
I suggest Lothario defined by Wikipedia defined as an unscrupulous seducer of women.
An old and famous character in Nicholas Rowe’s tragedy The Fair Penitent Dictionary.
At iCom, add the definitions rake, libertine and synonyms Romeo, Don Juan, Casanova, etc. No error made.
The Office Romeo is a well-worn term, but I don’t often hear Romeo on its own.
To my ear, Don Juan and Casanova have become rather quaint ‘literary’ clichu00e9s much overused by the mass-media, but somehow Lothario still seems to have a certain freshness. Is it possible to use it to gauge the extent of your attention rather than getting all your
voice and grammar from TV dramas?
- 620522 views
- 515 answers
- 228269 votes
-
Asked on May 8, 2021 in Word choice.
Even if finally isn’t explicitly specified, it’s usually implied… “I…
finally got around to “?
If it’s impossible, don’t
get around to something after shoud know that something is to do, whileyou’ve planned to do it for something long time. What should you do it for?
- 611044 views
- 170 answers
- 225250 votes
-
Asked on May 8, 2021 in Word choice.
I suggest Lothario defined by Wikipedia defined as an unscrupulous seducer of women.
An old and famous character in Nicholas Rowe’s tragedy The Fair Penitent Dictionary.
At iCom, add the definitions rake, libertine and synonyms Romeo, Don Juan, Casanova, etc. No error made.
The Office Romeo is a well-worn term, but I don’t often hear Romeo on its own.
To my ear, Don Juan and Casanova have become rather quaint ‘literary’ clichu00e9s much overused by the mass-media, but somehow Lothario still seems to have a certain freshness. Is it possible to use it to gauge the extent of your attention rather than getting all your
voice and grammar from TV dramas?
- 620522 views
- 515 answers
- 228269 votes
-
Asked on May 7, 2021 in Word choice.
Even if finally isn’t explicitly specified, it’s usually implied… “I…
finally got around to “?
If it’s impossible, don’t
get around to something after shoud know that something is to do, whileyou’ve planned to do it for something long time. What should you do it for?
- 611044 views
- 170 answers
- 225250 votes
-
Asked on May 7, 2021 in Word choice.
I suggest Lothario defined by Wikipedia defined as an unscrupulous seducer of women.
An old and famous character in Nicholas Rowe’s tragedy The Fair Penitent Dictionary.
At iCom, add the definitions rake, libertine and synonyms Romeo, Don Juan, Casanova, etc. No error made.
The Office Romeo is a well-worn term, but I don’t often hear Romeo on its own.
To my ear, Don Juan and Casanova have become rather quaint ‘literary’ clichu00e9s much overused by the mass-media, but somehow Lothario still seems to have a certain freshness. Is it possible to use it to gauge the extent of your attention rather than getting all your
voice and grammar from TV dramas?
- 620522 views
- 515 answers
- 228269 votes