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Synonyms for coquette
Grammar : Noun |
Spell : koh-ket |
Phonetic Transcription : koʊˈkɛt |
Définition of coquette
Origin :- 1660s, from French fem. of coquet (male) "flirt" (see coquet).
- noun flirt
- "La Coquetta," "The Coquette," was the title of a cigar shop.
- Extract from : « Aztec Land » by Maturin M. Ballou
- Yet some of the sheeny-winged gallants called her a coquette.
- Extract from : « Japanese Fairy World » by William Elliot Griffis
- Coquette, if you will, with fifty, but give your affections to one.
- Extract from : « That Boy Of Norcott's » by Charles James Lever
- I 'd be sorry, very sorry, to doubt it; but she never said I was a coquette?
- Extract from : « The Bramleighs Of Bishop's Folly » by Charles James Lever
- She is a coquette, too, about that foot and ankle,—I rather like a woman to be so.
- Extract from : « Charles O'Malley, The Irish Dragoon, Volume 2 (of 2) » by Charles Lever
- People called her a coquette––the most dangerous of coquettes, because she was not a cold one.
- Extract from : « The Bondwoman » by Marah Ellis Ryan
- I have many things to say to you yet before—— For one, I am not a coquette?
- Extract from : « Molly Bawn » by Margaret Wolfe Hamilton
- Think of all you said to me yesterday and this morning; and now, now you called me a coquette!
- Extract from : « Molly Bawn » by Margaret Wolfe Hamilton
- She was a Frenchwoman, a beauty, and a little—a very little—of a coquette.
- Extract from : « Chambers's Edinburgh Journal, No. 450 » by Various
- His mad joy did not allow him to see anything of the coquette in that confession.
- Extract from : « Blow The Man Down » by Holman Day
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Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019