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Fawning   /fˈɔnɪŋ/   Listen
verb
Fawn  v. i.  To bring forth a fawn.



Fawn  v. i.  (past & past part. fawned; pres. part. fawning)  To court favor by low cringing, frisking, etc., as a dog; to flatter meanly; often followed by on or upon. "You showed your teeth like apes, and fawned like hounds." "Thou with trembling fear, Or like a fawning parasite, obeyest." "Courtiers who fawn on a master while they betray him."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Fawning" Quotes from Famous Books



... was deeper when the supreme usher led him away from the throne than when he approached it. As he made his way out of the banqueting hall, a score of noblemen, captains of thousands, over-eunuchs, and more trailed at his heels, salaaming, fawning, congratulating, offering all manner of service. Not on the days following his victory at the Isthmia had his head been in such a whirl. He hardly heard the well-meant warning which Artabanus, the shrewd old vizier, gave as he passed the door of ...
— A Victor of Salamis • William Stearns Davis

... fearful that the Church of Rome will muzzle somebody, found that they couldn't drive me out of town; that they couldn't take the bread from the mouths of my babes because I had dared utter my honest thoughts like a freeman; that I was to continue to edit the Express so long as I liked, they came fawning about me like a lot of spaniels afraid of the lash! But not one of them ever tried to convert me. Not one of them ever tried, by kindly argument, to convince me that I was wrong. Not one of them ever invited me to church—or prayed for me, so far as I could learn. Perhaps ...
— Volume 12 of Brann The Iconoclast • William Cowper Brann

... asked him what kind of a man was the notorious and infamous Griffiths Wainewright. {32} In a moment Borrow’s face changed: his mouth broke into a Carker-like smile, his eyes became elongated to an expression that was at once fawning and sinister, as he said, “Wainewright! He used to sit in an armchair close to the fire and smile all the evening like this.” He made me see Wainewright and hear his voice as plainly as though I had seen him and heard him in ...
— Old Familiar Faces • Theodore Watts-Dunton

... of the cringing and fawning of which my wealth made me the object; I loathed the deference paid me, because I knew it was paid, not to me, but to my money—I was homesick to hear someone tell me to go to hell. I wanted to brush up against that spirit which says ...
— Dennison Grant - A Novel of To-day • Robert Stead

... for men like Baron Levy? But the usurer's burst of democratic spleen did not surprise his precocious and acute faculty of observation. He had before remarked, that it is the persons who fawn most upon an aristocracy, and profit the most by the fawning, who are ever at heart its bitterest disparagers. Why is this? Because one full half of democratic opinion is made up of envy; and we can only envy what is brought before our eyes, and what, while very near ...
— The International Monthly, Volume 5, No. 3, March, 1852 • Various


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