英:['æmərɪst]
美:['æmərɪst]
英:['æmərɪst]
美:['æmərɪst]
词根:amorist
adv.amorously 好色地;妖艳地
Latin amor "love" + -ist >entry 1 — more at amour
The first known use of amorist was in 1595
1 Faint amorist, what, dost thou think To taste Love's honey, and not drink One dram of gall? or to devour A world of sweet, and taste no sour?
2 Lovelace is even a better type in his rare good things of the military amorist and poet.
3 It was the custom for an amorist to impress the name of his mistress in the dust, or upon the damp earth, with letters fixed upon his shoe.
4 Our uncounted amorists of tail-piece song and illustrated story provide the readiest means of escape from the somewhat uninspiring life that most men and women are living just now in America.
5 Frizzy straight-cut masses that would have charmed Rossetti abounded, and one gentleman, who was pointed out to Graham under the mysterious title of an "amorist," wore his hair in two becoming plaits à la Marguerite.
6 I also found amusement in comparing his meek wooing, like that of an early Italian amorist, with his rumbustious theories as to marriage by capture and other primitive methods of bringing woman to heel.
7 Out of his blindness, out of his loneliness, out of the welter of hedonists and amorists and feminists and fantasists who crowded upon him, the great, terrible egoist strikes his last blow!
8 Satiety is the bane of the amorist, and of worse than he.
9 From those extraordinary letters of his, to his friends and to his love, we gather that this fierce amorist of Beauty was not without his Philosophy.
10 The old amorist observed it, and made a tremendous effort to overcome his most inopportune drowsiness.
11 It consists but seldom in any regularity of feature, for their appeal is to the amorist rather than to the sculptor in marble.
12 The Incredible Casanova: the magnificent follies of a peerless adventurer, amorist and charlatan, a biography.
13 Walter Pater approaches a System of Metaphysical Thought as a somewhat furtive amorist might approach a sleeping Nymph.
14 He is riding to his death, the fool amorist.
15 The custom of the country and the time sanctioned a freedom of manners, and a frequency of meeting on the part of rustic amorists, of which he was not slow to avail himself.
16 A memory of the days when Izaak was an amorist, and shone in love ditties, appears thus.
17 What causes such true amorists of imaginative creation real suffering is when a book comes to an end.
18 Frizzy straight-cut masses that would have charmed Rossetti abounded, and one gentleman, who was pointed out to Graham under the mysterious title of an "amorist", wore his hair in two becoming plaits a la Marguerite.
19 The marquis was a great lord and a brave captain, but long past his first youth; his actions went somewhat too deliberately ever to be roused to the high lunacies of the Sestian amorist.
20 One knows it so well, that particular tone; the tone of the jaded amorist, for whom "the unspeakable rural solitudes" and "the sweet security of streets" mean, both of them, boredom and desolation.