don juan in English

noun
1
a legendary Spanish nobleman known for his dissolute life and for seducing women.
noun

Use "don juan" in a sentence

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

1. The Audacities of Molière’s Don Juan

2. As for satiety Don Juan insists upon it, on the contrary.

3. 6 synonyms for Amorist: Casanova, Don Juan, gallant, lady's man, Lothario, Romeo

4. But Don Juan moves with the speed of a Special Olympic hurdler.

5. Moreover, the first tango recorded by an orchestra was "Don Juan", whose author is Ernesto Ponzio.

6. Synonyms for Amorist include Casanova, lover, paramour, Romeo, suitor, swain, wooer, Don Juan, lady's man and womanizer

7. He converses with Don Juan and a couple of other blas mortals, uttering Shavian iconoclasms with an air of Courteous boredom.

8. The Merry-go-round by Carl Van Vechten (1918) "Was Saltus Ballyhooing for this institution? The hero is a modern Don Juan.

9. There are also several similar words to Amorist in our dictionary, which are Casanova, Lover, Paramour, Romeo, Suitor, Swain, Wooer and Don Juan. Amorist is …

10. It is named for Don Juan Luis Cozcatzin, who appears in the codex as "alcalde ordinario de esta ciudad de México" ("ordinary mayor of this city of Mexico").

11. 2 - “He may be lying but what he says is true”: the sacred tradition of don Juan as reported by Carlos Castaneda, anthropologist, trickster, guru, Allegorist By Charlotte E

12. Don Juan smiled Benevolently as I explained my mistake.: Don Juan sonrió con benevolencia cuando expliqué mi equivocación.: It's from there that they smile Benevolently down on Bajor.: Desde ahí sonríen a Bajor con benevolencia.: The Holy Father has Benevolently understood that the reasons for which Saint Ignatius wanted the role of superior general to be lifelong have changed.

13. The plan of the research will be to position Moliere's The Misanthrope (Mis.), School for Wives, as well as Don Juan, or the Stone Guest as works that illustrate a specific social milieu, and then to show how Anglicizers of Moliere, notably Wycherley in The Plain Dealer and The Country Wife and Byron in Don Juan, offer a "take" on Moliere that

14. Albacete, city, capital of Albacete provincia (province), in the Castile-La Mancha comunidad autónoma (autonomous community), southeast-central Spain.Albacete is located in the historic La Mancha region, on the Don Juan River at its juncture with the María Cristina Canal

15. Anergy homologue aerodinamika poids join otorite nakit way forward overhauls Luted ulkoiset puitteet Don Juan, womanizer, man who courts a large number of women (often treating them disrespectfully) douze fois plus Gender omluvit posuv message confirmation pass to account caldare pruwa (f.) change jobs character wheel sudjelovati vegetative

16. Characters like Europa, Alcyone, Cronus, Sisyphus, Orpheus, Eurydice, Ulysses, Hercules, the river Gods of the Earth or Don Juan and other Mozart characters who thanks to the imagination of Anna Chromy have undergone fiery metamorphoses and admirably manage to reflect the feelings and conflicts of the world in which we live.

17. Byronic Heroism Byronic heroism refers to a radical and revolutionary brand of heroics explored throughout a number of later English Romantic and Victorian works of literature, particularly in the epic narrative poems of the English Romantic poet Lord Byron, including Manfred, Don Juan, Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage, the Giaour, and The Corsair.

18. In the meantime, General Franco decided to recognise Don Juan Carlos (Juan Carlos de Borbón y Borbón Dos Sicilias, Count of Barcelona) who fused both the Isabellinist line, the Alphonist line and the Carlist line of Borbon y Austria which arose at the death of King Alfonso Carlos I in 1936.

19. In the meantime, General Franco decided to recognise Don Juan Carlos (Juan Carlos de Borbón y Borbón Dos Sicilias, Count of Barcelona) who fused both the Isabellinist line, the Alphonist line and the Carlist line of Borbon y Austria which arose at the death of King Alfonso Carlos I in 1936.