deflower

IPA: dɪfɫaʊɝ

verb

  • (transitive) To take the virginity of (somebody), especially a woman or girl.
  • (transitive) To deprive of flowers.
  • (transitive) To deprive of grace and beauty.
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Examples of "deflower" in Sentences

  • If I deflower a Valkyrie before wedding her, I will never earn ohalla.
  • They used the very same myth of the lustful African just waiting to deflower Southern maidenhood …
  • Do it, he urged himself, studying her delicate neck, imagining the thrill it would be to deflower her.
  • Added bonus: If they don't get there before a lunar eclipse, Lezar will deflower her and get the power to summon a dragon.
  • And mohammad, who married a six year old child, but didn't deflower her until she was nine, so that was OK, then, is his prophet.
  • She supplied him with virgins, including her own sister, to first deflower and then destroy, taping and narrating each escapade for later private viewing.
  • There are men in Guam whose full-time job is to travel the countryside and deflower young virgins, who pay them for the privilege of having sex for the first time.
  • April 2006: On welcoming the then newly elected female MP Mara Carfagna to parliament he joked: "I am obliged to remind you of a rule in the Forza Italia group, the jus primae noctis" (a Latin reference to the medieval "law of the first night" which gave the lord of an estate the right to "deflower" new brides)?

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synonyms for deflower
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