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darling
1[ dahr-ling ]
noun
- a person very dear to another; one dearly loved.
- (sometimes initial capital letter) an affectionate or familiar term of address.
- a person or thing in great favor; a favorite:
She was the darling of caf鈥娒 society.
adjective
- very dear; dearly loved:
my darling child.
- favorite; cherished.
- Informal. charming; cute; lovable:
What a darling baby!
Darling
2[ dahr-ling ]
noun
- Jay Nor路wood [nawr, -w, oo, d], Ding, 1876鈥1962, U.S. political cartoonist.
Darling
1/ 藞诲蓱藧濒瑟艐 /
noun
- DarlingGrace18151842FEnglishPOLITICS: national heroine Grace. 1815鈥42, English national heroine, famous for her rescue (1838) of some shipwrecked sailors with her father, a lighthouse keeper
darling
2/ 藞诲蓱藧濒瑟艐 /
noun
- a person very much loved: often used as a term of address
- a favourite
the teacher's darling
adjective
- beloved
- much admired; pleasing
a darling hat
Other 亚洲网紅露点 Forms
- 诲补谤顎僱颈苍驳路濒测 adverb
- 诲补谤顎僱颈苍驳路苍别蝉蝉 noun
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of darling1
Example Sentences
鈥淒ead Outlaw,鈥 a critics鈥 darling when it premiered last year at Audible鈥檚 Minetta Lane Theatre, may be the only musical to make the disposition of a body an occasion for singing and dancing.
A letter written in 1945 by a woman addressed to her "darling" in the RAF has been found in a military uniform bought in a charity shop.
Such moves announce the writers鈥 ruthlessness when it comes to their heroes, selling the looming possibility that no one is safe in their show, not even the audience鈥檚 darlings.
For decades, the eighty-year-old Wilkinson has been a darling of the conservative legal movement.
In December 1927, it cautioned young women "to become a good cook before you marry, darling. Then you will be competent to rebuke a staff of domestics or to dispense with one".
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