Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Only a woman of easy virtue would tart herself up like this.
She was like every other woman of easy virtue.
It's much more convenient if I'm a woman of easy virtue."
So thi was what a woman of easy virtue looked like!
Her dress made it impossible to ignore them, even though he tried not to stare: woman of easy virtue, indeed.
They greeted him almost as enthusiastically as if he were a woman of easy virtue.
Though exposed flesh would have invited frostbite, women of easy virtue were not hard to spot.
For them, especially if they cast themselves as ingenues or women of easy virtue, the risks would be much less than for us.
Only a woman of easy virtue would allow a stranger to take her on board his yacht without a murmur of protest.
A woman of easy virtue.
At the end of the song, a woman of easy virtue attempts to seduce Stagger Lee.
Torres didn't know exactly why, but this woman reminded her of the women of easy virtue who followed the Klingon fleets.
It ran under the headline: Women of Easy Virtue to Show Patriotism.
In the 19th century, when white symbolized chastity, brightly colored corsets were worn only by women of easy virtue.
He made a spectacularly bad throw, hitting a sign that read, "Women of Easy Virtue Welcome."
But just let the poor little woman open her legs to more than the statutory one, and she's cheap, a woman of easy virtue, a social outcast.
She had, unjustly, earned a reputation for sexual depravity, and was determined that she would never be mistaken for a woman of easy virtue again.
Like an early-day Jack the Ripper, he specialized in women of easy virtue, whom he killed with blows from a heavy-bladed instrument.
Typically, when Nigerian newspapers announced last month the discovery of the nation's first two known AIDS victims, they were described as "women of easy virtue."
There were rumors the local women of easy virtue deliberately didn't get their VD treated so they could pass it on to U.S. soldiers.
Woyzeck is a simple soldier ("I loved life, so I joined the army") who falls in love with a woman of easy virtue and fathers her child.
I entered the chamber of a woman of easy virtue, as the sanctuary of love and beauty: and in her person, I thought I saw the divinity.
She often played women of easy virtue - for example in Ealing's The Blue Lamp (1950) and The Fallen Idol (1948), one of her earliest films.
Of Henry Clay, one of his villains, Olasky writes, "Clay went on to treat particular constitutional clauses as he treated Washington women of easy virtue."
In the language of the kind of novels she loves reading, she describes herself as having become "a woman of pleasure, a scarlet woman, a woman of easy virtue".