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Synonyms for jilted
Grammar : Adj |
Spell : jilt |
Phonetic Transcription : dʒɪlt |
Définition of jilted
Origin :- "to deceive (especially after holding out hopes), cheat, trick," 1660s, from the same source as jilt (n.). Related: Jilted; jilting.
- adj left
- But what makes me sick is to have everyone saying you've jilted me.
- Extract from : « K » by Mary Roberts Rinehart
- But I hope the poor man, though I don't like him, has not been jilted?
- Extract from : « Tales And Novels, Volume 5 (of 10) » by Maria Edgeworth
- She jilted him with a jolt that knocked his heart out of his mouth.
- Extract from : « In a Little Town » by Rupert Hughes
- He had become engaged to a certain Miss Mary Tremenhere, and by her he had been—jilted.
- Extract from : « Kept in the Dark » by Anthony Trollope
- It was said truly of him that the girl had jilted him, but falsely of her that she had been jilted.
- Extract from : « Kept in the Dark » by Anthony Trollope
- She could not bear to live in Exeter as the girl that had been jilted.
- Extract from : « Kept in the Dark » by Anthony Trollope
- Then had come her downfall, in which it was commonly said of her that she had been jilted by her lover.
- Extract from : « Kept in the Dark » by Anthony Trollope
- I too have had a lover, and I have—jilted him, if you please to call it so.
- Extract from : « Kept in the Dark » by Anthony Trollope
- But there was a doubt as to this point, and people said that he had been jilted—much to his disgust.
- Extract from : « Kept in the Dark » by Anthony Trollope
- Then Sir Francis had been jilted, and Dick had again become indispensable to him.
- Extract from : « Kept in the Dark » by Anthony Trollope
Antonyms for jilted
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019