Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"roguishly" Definitions
  1. in a pleasant or funny way but looking as if you might do something wrong

21 Sentences With "roguishly"

How to use roguishly in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "roguishly" and check conjugation/comparative form for "roguishly". Mastering all the usages of "roguishly" from sentence examples published by news publications.

She was a woman who loved women and courted them roguishly.
And he has movie star good looks — roguishly played by the blue-eyed, chiseled Jude Law.
The energetic Mr. McLean has just the right touch with Bob's roguishly sexy, good-guy appeal.
"This morning I was looking for a clean shirt and this was it," he said roguishly.
To cap off this segment, Allen even looks at the camera directly and roguishly raises his eyebrows.
But along came "Star S'mores," a Sesame space opera, which set Cookie as "roguishly handsome" Flan Solo.
The two white leads star as a woman whose marriage just ended, and her roguishly blandsome safari leader.
At best, cults are now seen as roguishly edgy, cast in a nostalgic glow as lawlessly free from convention.
Mr. Harder roguishly leads one guys-and-gals quintet; Ms. Sims and Mr. Sims follow this with an atmospherically smoldering duet.
Just as he reaches the stall, she smiles roguishly, then extends one endless limb and slams the door with her foot.
Nagy's novel roguishly equates international brinkmanship with interpersonal relations, an analogy that underscores the ways in which both can abjure immutable truths.
He takes a good bit of his plot from the historical peasants' rebellion led by Robert Kett, who appears here as a roguishly romantic hero.
Page four of this issue features Stieglitz's photograph of "Fountain" that he roguishly homo-eroticized by placing it in front of Marsden Hartley's rumpus painting "The Warriors" (1913).
"Untitled [Young Man, Old Woman, and children standing outside a tent]" (333–69) features a roguishly handsome young man and an old woman who grips the hands of the children protectively, with a shy smile.
Here's the cast photo for our full obsessing: That's Law and as a roguishly handsome Dumbledore on the far left, keeping plenty of distance between himself and his friend-turned-adversary, Grindelwald, who's holding the infamous Elder Wand.
A roguishly demure garden party frock "toys with the idea of what a woman's costume or uniform is, and transforms it," said Katharine Schub, a designer whose label, Homecque, offers a twisted, stripped-down interpretation: a faux leather pinafore.
In the new season, the show seems to have synthesized the two sides of its personality more successfully than Elliot has, externalizing his existential struggle and placing Mr. Robot, as roguishly portrayed by Christian Slater, directly into the global disruption narrative.
White House Memo WASHINGTON — "Let's go get a steak sometime," Anthony Scaramucci said, throwing his arm around a reporter who turned up at his West Wing office on Wednesday to make contact with the latest — and most profane, wisecracking, roguishly irrepressible — New Yorker to join President Trump's staff.
She recognizes him as the young man she noticed earlier and finds him roguishly young and handsome; a great match for her. Mr. Winfield suffers from an ocular ailment and must abstain from reading and writing. He's lodging at the Pendletons', and confides to Ruth that Joseph Pendleton and Hepsey, her aunt's maid, are courting. He asks Ruth to read the newspapers to him, and she agrees.
I have seen men who appeared > to be normal suddenly smile roguishly, soften their voices, and simper as > they greeted homosexual friends ... Many times I saw these changes occur > after I had gained a homosexual's confidence and he could safely risk my > disapproval. Once as I watched a luncheon companion become an effeminate > caricature of himself, he apologised, [saying] "It is hard to always > remember that one is a man."Stearn 1962, 29Levine, 1998, pp. 21–23 Pre-Stonewall "closet" culture accepted homosexuality as effeminate behaviour, and thus emphasised camp, drag, and swish behaviour, including an interest in fashion and decorating.
The film critic for The New York Times, panned the film when it was first released, writing, "According to yesterday's newcomer at the Rialto, C-Man, the Treasury Department's typical customs agent is a suave, amiable sleuth who takes knives, pistols and slugging in stride and roguishly admits that it's all in a day's work. Well and good, but we'll wager that most C-Men are a lot smarter than Dean Jagger ... Miss Elwen and newcomer Harry Landers, a juvenile Richard Widmark, try hard, but most of the actors perk up only at the prospect of another chase. And in view of the material they had to work with, the Treasury Department will probably forgive them."The New York Times.

No results under this filter, show 21 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.