Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
First, I'll have a talk with the sodden amorist.
A memory of the days when Izaak was an amorist, and shone in love ditties, appears thus.
"He may be the complete amorist," smiled Markham.
The Cautious Amorist 1934 (first published in the U.S. in 1932)
The contribution of 'The Amorist' towards the development of the magazine was the introduction of tight-lacing and high heels subjects.
In Experiment in Autobiography (1934), Wells wrote: "I was never a great amorist, though I have loved several people very deeply."
Not for many years had the once-gallant young Nathaniel Greenleaf Friar of Boston been an adventurous amorist.
In his heyday, as he let me know, he had been a great amorist; it was some while, I think, since he had taken to a youth whom he trusted not to mock him.
Sulu was wrestling with the bearded amorist in the black cloak as she clutched her tattered tunic in front of her; apparently she had been changing out of her princess's dress when ac-costed.
This kind of free association happens often when he talks, making a conversation with him feel like a group chat with the various sides of his personality: the celebrity begins, the writer interrupts, the amorist interjects and then the devoted son continues.
With considerable annoyance, Gregory assumed that the Russian amorist had found little Sister Madeleine so responsive to his blandishments that he had forgotten all about the time; but ten minutes later he had grave reason to regret his unworthy suspicions.
Mr. Fraser's new book tells three relatively brief episodes from the life of the "celebrated Victorian soldier, scoundrel, amorist and self-confessed poltroon" - including one in which he reluctantly helps to foil an assassination attempt against Franz Josef, emperor of Austria.
Photo Bits also featured a weekly article discussing miscellaneous aspects of the show business, written by some anonymous person before 11 January 1908, by a person with the pseudonym 'The Amorist' after that date, and by an American who used the pseudonym 'Cosmopolite' from 23 July 1910.