Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
In simpler days, today's preener was warned that it could become tomorrow's cleaning utensil.
Ever the preener.
But Ms. Zimmerman can be a preener, and Leonardo fairly reeks of ingenuity.
While he's not a preener, Louie does love attention, from the seamstress pinning his jacket, to the salesman who compliments him, to his guest.
Theodore Roosevelt, neither a social preener of the right nor a touchy-feely member of the left but an O.K. guy in my book, would probably agree.
He is colorful, dapper and thoroughly deceitful, both a preener and a pretender, with the actor missing only the hints of a tragic dimension to the character.
Here, dressed in excruciatingly cool head-to-toe black, his Lloyd is a natural preener who loves to play God and finds the self-aggrandizing pose in every moment of catastrophe.
Lance (James A. Woods), the star of Rufus's "Unreasonable Truth of Butterflies," is a nitwit preener.
Of course, Leonard Bernstein was more than a calculating preener: John Weidman, Stephen Sondheim and Terrence McNally know that full well.