In place of serious and measured lament, then, the book provokes more and more comedy at its promiscuous and preposterous poor-mouthing. |
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Inside the pearly white gates of the heaven in another world, promiscuous women teased men and had many boy friends at the same time. |
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A promiscuous woman is a loose woman. Note that in all three propositions, the reference is to sexual promiscuity. |
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Instead, he chose to focus his question on the client's change to not being promiscuous. |
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As the American houses have seduced corporate Britain, so companies have become more promiscuous in their search for intelligence. |
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If the girl was deemed promiscuous, became pregnant, or could not keep a job, she could be returned to the reform school. |
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There's a difference between being promiscuous and making serious strategic bets that may be the cause for regrets. |
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Hence the virginal Elizabeth, who was chaste and civilised where her queenly predecessor was promiscuous and barbaric. |
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The only reason he turned her down is because this rumor got started that Christy was the most promiscuous girl at our school. |
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But his chief opponent, the blowsily good-hearted, promiscuous Ida loses much of her instinctive belief in right and wrong. |
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He displays a hedonism and love of the good life that mirrors the promiscuous and hellraising lifestyle Liam had. |
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So, not only are the students feckless, lazy, promiscuous and drunk, they're also liars. |
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The memoir displayed depression in a flighty, headstrong, energetic, sexually promiscuous young woman. |
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Many of us secretly harbor a suspicion that somebody somewhere really is finding both fun and fulfillment while being sexually promiscuous. |
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Anyone who is sexually promiscuous is of increased risk of acquiring a sexually transmitted infection. |
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Apparently that meant I was young, preppy-looking, and potentially very promiscuous. |
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Although an unseasoned raw talent, her performance as a free-speaking, promiscuous teen was a memorable debut. |
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One can be physically promiscuous without being emotionally unfaithful, flighty, or inconstant. |
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Unashamedly promiscuous, Slater's ambition dictates that a quick bonk can often be indispensable to an upwardly mobile career. |
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To change his image, he started taking riskier film roles, like Cole, the promiscuous bed-hopper. |
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Permanently sloshed and sportively promiscuous, he was also deeply unhappy. |
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In the coming-of-age dramedy Whole New Thing, cowritten by and costarring out Canadian Daniel MacIvor, a precocious 13-year-old falls for his promiscuous gay teacher. |
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Do you regret not being sexually promiscuous in high school? |
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Still, you have reason to be hesitant if he's been promiscuous lately. |
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Charles was succeeded by his brother James II, who was even more promiscuous, and was said to have bedded over a thousand women. |
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Devout New England Puritans were not unusually promiscuous or intemperate. |
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Bonobos, too, have been shown in the past year to hunt animals for food, and are losing their promiscuous aura as more data come in. |
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There has been a long-held belief in non-aboriginal society that aboriginal women are immoral and sexually promiscuous. |
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Common perceptions of LGBTI organisations are that the workers are often sexually promiscuous. |
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Leaving behind her a hurting husband and weeping children, Gomer returned to her promiscuous free lifestyle. |
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When the term is employed in such a promiscuous way, it really comes down to a crime of using the telephone to con people out of their money. |
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Full of self-loathing, she became self-destructive and promiscuous. |
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He declared that Western women are sexually promiscuous in a manner not even found in the natural world. |
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Some damselfish are promiscuous, and still others are monogamous. |
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War makes strange bedfellows and the U.S. has certainly been promiscuous before choosing its allies in past wars. |
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The dispersal of the juveniles differs from that of most other promiscuous or polygynous mammals, being female-biased with a fraction of males remaining philopatric. |
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An alternative explanation is that Lady Green Sleeves was, through her costume, incorrectly assumed to be sexually promiscuous. |
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The researchers studied the oldfield mouse, which mates for life, and a related species, the highly promiscuous white-footed mouse. |
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What is more, knowing the terms of the new HIV law, promiscuous men or women who suspect they may have HIV are far less likely to turn up at the nearest testing centre to find out for sure. |
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Further work by the Virginians, to see if such patterns hold for promiscuous and monogamous species in other groups of animals, may go some way towards substantiating their findings. |
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Other speakers in Lusaka also suggested that this is not being made a subject for discussion in all candour, although everyone is aware that the spreading of the HIV virus is due, above all, to promiscuous behaviour. |
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The focus on disease transmission, ignoring other social determinants, has stigmatized this population as sexually promiscuous and hyper-masculine. |
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Written by star Amy Schumer, it's a comedy about a hard-living journalist who tries to give up her sexually promiscuous lifestyle when she unexpectedly falls in love. |
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His party has no members of parliament, a situation unlikely to change at the next election, and offers promiscuous and profligate policies that add up to errant nonsense as a platform for government. |
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Though it was mostly matriarchal, it was still a society where females who performed in music clubs were assumed to be promiscuous and uneducated. |
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Virginia is a wild, promiscuous, good-time girl, but she's self-sufficient. |
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One possible interpretation of the lyrics is that Lady Green Sleeves was a promiscuous young woman and perhaps a prostitute. |
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They make their unfortunate wearers appear like sexually promiscuous, drugged-up bush babies, only slight less intelligent. |
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Postings targeting Aboriginal Canadians portrayed them as non-contributing persons, who abused alcohol, gambled excessively, and were promiscuous, poor, illiterate and violent. |
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In the hands of Mr Johnson, a promiscuous flip-flopper himself, this invites the question of whether such maverick behaviour would be tolerable today, with the parliamentary system at its weakest in decades. |
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African cowpea cultivars are mostly promiscuous and nodulate with indigenous Rhizobium strain present in the soil. |
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Is the rowdy, promiscuous, drink-the-blokes-under-the-table image of the Valley Girl just a tired stereotype, or is it near the truth? |
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By contrast, Pauline, her Corsican childhood spent in the relatively modest Bonaparte household in Ajaccio, was a spoilt, sexually promiscuous airhead. |
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Opponents note that preventing the transmission of sexually transmitted diseases can be achieved by avoiding promiscuous sexual contact in the first place. |
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The aristocrats of the play, both mortal and immortal, are promiscuous. |
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A promiscuous crowd of others, especially women, are mentioned. |
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Or is it the falling-downdrunk Dylan, the prototype, promiscuous, tosspot poet, the tormented soul of those last grave-chasing days across the ocean? |
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The promiscuous peafowl has also charged at gift shop windows after mistaking his own reflection for a rival bird at Hatton Adventure World, in Hatton, Warks. |
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