Use "lustful" in a sentence

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

1. She ignored his lustful glances.

2. I find your lustful women preposterous.

3. Idleness can also cause lustful thoughts.

4. A lustful desire may be the cause.

5. Her sensuous grace roused his lustful nature.

6. Do you consider all people to be lustful.

7. I do not think Tony was a lustful man.

8. Actually, I've... had rather a lot of lustful thoughts.

9. I am lustful, because my quality function is normal!

10. Club Med is the renowned retreat for lustful yuppies.

11. It wasn’t lustful, it was full of passion and Apologeticness

12. If a man struggles lustful thoughts, that's his problem, not mine.

13. Adelmo agreed and duly submitted to Berengar's lustful advances.

14. The lustful brood of wenches with endless gashes in them.

15. Just a glance is quite enough to kill the lustful guy.

16. Yes, he's over there talking to that lustful little countess.

17. It is the type of sports car that excites lustful Covetousness.

18. That politician, lustful for power, does not have a lusty attitude towards life.

19. The lustful scenes of the movie were abhorrent to the old lady.

20. Jamie Foxx and Tommy Davidson play buddies with lustful designs on their dates.

21. Not only was the act of adultery wrong, but even a lustful look.

22. Instead of exchanging lustful glances , the couple looked away from each other.

23. You make a hot combination . Lustful but not lasting due to your jealous nature.

24. The law doesn't distinguish between an isolated lustful incident and a serious long-standing affair.

25. Gilgamesh himself was described as a lustful, violent demigod, or part god, part man.

26. Some women have high levels of both sex hormones, and testosterone makes people lustful.

27. Lustful or sensual: Today's woman is no longer just the plaything of the Concupiscent male.

28. We have allowed that lustful thought to develop and take us down the path to death.

29. These texts describe gods that were, according to John Gray’s book The Canaanites, “contentious, jealous, vindictive, lustful.”

30. One day, Bong-sun gets possessed by a lustful virgin ghost named Shin Soon-ae (Kim Seul-gi).

31. Ultimately the batterer is himself tricked by his lustful appetite, and his violent acts inevitably escalate.

32. Concupiscent Meaning: "characterized by illicit desire, lustful," mid-15c., from Latin Concupiscentem (nominative… See definitions of Concupiscent.

33. Coltish Meaning: "wild, frisky," also in early use "lustful, lewd," from colt + -ish

34. This splashing about at least had several nice moments, with Anjali Bhimani as the lustful daughter Myrrha.

35. Detractors then and now thought it was designed to satisfy the lustful desires of the lusty prophet.

36. They were tyrannical bullies, and the sin of their lustful fathers is likened to the perversions of Sodom and Gomorrah.

37. Blissom ( third-person singular simple present Blissoms, present participle Blissoming, simple past and past participle Blissomed ) To be lustful; to be lascivious.

38. Lustful travellers came from all over the world to watch him dance, naked except for a silk cap atop his curls.

39. Insecurity usually mars this relationship. This can be one extremely mawkish union. Unique, destructive, yet passionate and lustful resulting in impair and misgiving.

40. A lot of societies have imperfect deities: jealous gods, lustful gods, prankish gods, and the worshipers say, look, they are just like us.

41. The jewels glitter between her breasts enticing him to another happenstance of sex. The two adjoin like vacuums of self into another lustful foray of plight.

42. 26 Insecurity usually mars this relationship. This can be one extremely mawkish union. Unique, destructive, yet passionate and lustful resulting in impair and misgiving.

43. N Appetence Strong natural craving for that which gratifies the senses; appetite; animal desire: as, “lustful Appetence,” n Appetence A mental tendency toward an end; a volition or desire

44. Pierre-Louis Colin, speech-writer for France's foreign minister, has penned a literary, lustful and controversial "Guide to the Pretty Women of Paris", criticised by people as a " Voyeur 's Guide".

45. Carnal adjective sexual, animal, sexy (informal), fleshly, erotic, sensual, randy (informal, chiefly Brit.), steamy (informal), raunchy (slang), sensuous, voluptuous, lewd, wanton, amorous, salacious, prurient, impure, lascivious, lustful, lecherous, libidinous, licentious, unchaste Their passion became inflamed and their Carnal desires ran wild.

46. But the idyll of childhood attachment turns into a nightmare as Han, beautiful, proud and uncompromisingly loyal, struggles against the forces of tradition and tyranny in a large household where patriarchs and matriarchs wield inexorable power, lustful male relatives watch young Bondmaids to claim their rightful share of pleasure, visiting

47. Winter or scorching Queensland summer she’d be shrouded in a calf-length cape dress of thick homespun with an extra layer of fabric extending from neck to waist (to conceal any errant Boobishness), and long sleeves, elasticised at the wrist (so as to prevent passing men from being provoked to lustful imaginings by unscheduled glimpses of elbow).

48. His Corpulent figure and indolent manner belied ambition and a keen political intelligence.: In The Maltese Falcon, the dandified villain is a Corpulent homosexual with a lustful penchant for ancient art and gunsels.: The scornful laughter of the Corpulent man was accompanied by a slight hiccuping.: A Corpulent figure was silhouetted in the doorway leading to the sitting room, balancing an

49. Concupiscence (n.) "ardent desire, improper or illicit desire, lustful feeling," mid-14c., from Old French Concupiscence and directly from Late Latin concupiscentia "eager desire," from present-participle stem of Latin concupiscere, inceptive of concupere "to be very desirous of," from assimilated form of com-, here probably an intensive prefix (see com-), + cupere "to long for" (see cupidity).

50. Concupiscence (n.) "ardent desire, improper or illicit desire, lustful feeling," mid-14c., from Old French concupiscence and directly from Late Latin Concupiscentia "eager desire," from present-participle stem of Latin concupiscere, inceptive of concupere "to be very desirous of," from assimilated form of com-, here probably an intensive prefix (see com-), + cupere "to long for" (see cupidity).