suitor - use in sentences

Converse of object

  • reject: Finally, a rejected suitor persuaded one of the gods to deal with him.
  • marry: A girl pledges to marry the suitor who can spend the night in a haunted house.
  • attract: Like SBS, COM is losing money and failing to attract a suitor willing to take on the whole division.
  • find: Juliet's parents have found a suitor for her, Count Paris.
  • have: In each country a youth who had no suitor lost in public estimation.
  • kill: An effect of particular note was the blood stains on stage after Odysseus had killed the suitors.

Converse of subject

  • besiege: She was besieged by royal suitors, each of whom she favored when it was in her political interest to do so.

Adjective modifier

  • would-be: Today, our would-be suitors would almost certainly have met online.
  • noble: The noble Suitors crowded round him speaking words of respect while plotting evil in the depths of their hearts.
  • prospective: Cameron Diaz also admits to being the kind of former L.A. club girl who used to torture prospective male suitors at will.
  • rival: Energy Group agreed to the bid, but rival suitors may not be deterred.
  • potential: Is there ever a nice way of putting off potential suitors?
  • male: This practice assumes that no ardent male suitor could gain access to the widowed queen.

Modifies a noun

  • fund: If necessary public funding should be made available to allow this to happen in the form of a ' suitors fund ' .

Possessives

  • death: Then they both sat down by the trunk of the sacred olive-tree to plan the insolent Suitors ' deaths.
  • hand: She didn't try to show off by not taking any one of the suitors ' hands, but treated them all equally.
  • money: For rule 50 substitute:- " Payment of suitors ' money out of a District Registry or county court 50.

Preposition: for

  • hand: Suitors The suitors for the hand of Penelope, lords of the lands neighboring on Ithaca.

The word usage examples above have been gathered from various sources to reflect current and historical usage. They do not represent the opinions of YourDictionary.com.