buxom
IPA: bˈʌksʌm
adjective
- (of a woman) Having a full, voluptuous figure, especially possessing large breasts.
- (dated) Full of health, vigour, and good temper.
- (obsolete) Physically flexible or unresisting.
- (obsolete, by extension) Morally pliant; obedient and easily yielding to pressure.
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Examples of "buxom" in Sentences
- I was glad to drop the buxom wench.
- Ms Young is a blonde, buxom beauty.
- Favoring her mother, she is short and buxom.
- She is also their sexiest most buxom member.
- She is buxom, exuberant, and a cosplay maniac.
- He likes to think of herself as a buxom blonde.
- Like Reiko, Maria is tall, beautiful, and buxom.
- Hades, her father’s brother, to be called his buxom wife.
- She has been a street trader for 64 years, and is a 'buxom' widow.
- He dresses up as a buxom girl, a Kathak dancer, and a Nepali guard.
- The buxom beauty had lulled the woman hater into a state of ease by her charm.
- English marriage rites until the fourteenth century, when the wife promised to be "buxom" (which then meant submissive) and "bonair"
- None other of the deathless gods is to blame, but only cloud-gathering Zeus who gave her to Hades, her father's brother, to be called his buxom wife.
- Russell, best known as the buxom star of 1940s and 1950s movie, died of respiratory failure at her home in Santa Maria, central California, her family said.
- Henry seemed to have so much guilt attached to his marriage with Katherine; one wonders if it was because she was, as Henry himself testified, "buxom" in the bedchamber.
- Russell, best known as the buxom star of 1940s and 1950s movie, died of respiratory problems at her home in Santa Maria, central California, according to Etta Waterfield, her daughter-in-law.
- Russell, best known as the buxom star of 1940s and 1950s films, died of respiratory problems at her home in Santa Maria, central California, according to Etta Waterfield, her daughter-in-law.