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Seducer   /sɪdˈusər/   Listen
noun
Seducer  n.  
1.
One who, or that which, seduces. For a female seducer, the term seductress is also used "He whose firm faith no reason could remove, Will melt before that soft seducer, love."
2.
Specifically: One who induces another to engage in sexual intercourse.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Seducer" Quotes from Famous Books



... first act Pietro Longo discovers that his sister has been betrayed, shoots her seducer and is taken by ...
— Diversions in Sicily • H. Festing Jones

... into my famly," says she, "to corrupt my daughters, and to destroy the hinnocence of that infamous gal? Did you come here, sir, as a seducer, or only as a lodger? Speak, sir, speak!"—and she folded her arms quite fierce, and looked like Mrs. Siddums in the ...
— Memoirs of Mr. Charles J. Yellowplush - The Yellowplush Papers • William Makepeace Thackeray

... Bible, prove that the women of the olden time left as well as received an inheritance of shame. The names we have mentioned are among the brightest and the best. We will draw a veil over the characters of women such as the wife of Lot, or of Potiphar, the would-be seducer of Joseph, or of Job, the betrayer of her husband in misfortune, of Jezebel, the fury, or of Delilah, the traitress to her husband, and of a score of others, that make the age in which they lived seem ...
— The True Woman • Justin D. Fulton

... calculated to excite the sympathy of the brother—the parent—the husband. They were, indeed, testimonials of the weakness of the weaker sex, even where genius and learning would seem to be towering above the arts of the seducer. Why they were thus carefully preserved, is left to conjecture. Can it be true that Moore is correct, when, in his life of Lord Byron, he says, "The allusions which he (Byron) makes to instances of successful passion in his career, were not without ...
— Memoirs of Aaron Burr, Complete • Matthew L. Davis

... you think of the circumstances; the poor, pretty, inexperienced girl; of that poor slack-twisted family; of her defenselessness in that great house; of the experienced and practised and conscienceless seducer into whose hands she had fallen—when you think of all this, I do not see how you can fail to see how the words were wrung from her as a statement of the truth. "They" meant all the forces which had been too strong for her, not the least, her own ...
— Vandemark's Folly • Herbert Quick


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