agony aunt in English

noun

(British) advice columnist who has a regular advice feature (in a newspaper, magazine etc.)

Use "agony aunt" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "agony aunt" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "agony aunt", or refer to the context using the word "agony aunt" in the English Dictionary.

1. " Agony Aunt "?

2. Like an agony aunt?

3. Agony aunt, the advice column.

4. You sound like an agony aunt.

5. Hang on, Spratt is your agony aunt?

6. All this bloody Florence Nightingale, this agony aunt?

7. You should be an agony aunt in some newspaper.

8. Brenda is an agony Aunt for a daily newspaper

9. Don't miss the Agony Aunt column "Milk and Cookies.

10. Like an agony aunt whose articles you find in the magazines?

11. Agony aunt n noun: Refers to person, place, thing, quality, etc

12. Oh, I do love a bit of the agony aunt, don't you?

13. Dear Anti, So you have come to an agony Aunt for your Aunt agony

14. For some years there was a philosophical agony-aunt column called Dear Socrates, allegedly written by a reincarnation of the Athenian sage.

15. Hoddle suggested she was "more of an agony aunt" but during the 1998 World Cup, the press suggested Drewery had influenced Hoddle in squad selection.

16. Jane Lucas, an Agony aunt with a call-in radio show, has her own set of troubles with her (very Jewish) mother, and her husband Laurence

17. UK, informal (female advice columnist) (prensa) consejera sentimental nf + adj mf : consultora sentimental nf + adj : columnista consejera nf + adj : Brenda is an Agony aunt for a daily newspaper

18. She worked as an agony aunt for More magazine and wrote a weekly column for Reveal magazine covering Big Brother 8 as well as a daily blog on their website.

19. “The Maths Suite from Hitachi has clearly been created by people who really know education and considerable thought and effort has gone into ensuring that it delivers what teachers want.” Said Wendy Fortescue-Hubbard, who has been the Maths Agony Aunt for both the Times Educational Supplement and Teachers’ TV.