suitor - Wiktionary, the free dictionary (original) (raw)
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
- suitour (obsolete)
From Middle English sutour, from Anglo-Norman suytour, seuter, from Late Latin secutor (“follower, pursuer”).
- (General American) IPA(key): /ˈsutɚ/
- (UK) IPA(key): /ˈsuːtə/, /ˈsjuːtə/
- Rhymes: -uːtə(ɹ)
- Homophone: souter
suitor (plural suitors)
- One who pursues someone, especially a woman, for a romantic relationship or marriage; a wooer; one who falls in love with or courts someone.
Synonyms: beau, courter, sparker, wooer; see also Thesaurus:lover- 1999, Martha Craven Nussbaum, Sex and Social Justice, →ISBN, page 316:
(Notice that "Lysias" begins from the realistic assumption that an attractive young man with many suitors will "gratify" one of them, the only question being which. Rightly or wrongly, he treats the question, "Shall I at all?" as already resolved.) - For more quotations using this term, see Citations:suitor.
- 1999, Martha Craven Nussbaum, Sex and Social Justice, →ISBN, page 316:
- (by extension) A person or organization that expresses an interest in working with, or taking over, another.
- 2016, Gary D. McGugan, Three Weeks Less a Day, page 43:
[…] and Mortimer asserted he had no shortage of suitors ready, willing, and able to make acquisition loans […] - 2023 September 21, Silas Brown, Dinesh Nair, Swetha Gopinath, “Blackstone, Permira Explore Bid for eBay-Backed Adevinta”, in Bloomberg.com[1]:
The Betaville blog wrote earlier this week about market speculation that Adevinta was attracting takeover interest, without naming the suitors.
- 2016, Gary D. McGugan, Three Weeks Less a Day, page 43:
- (law) A party to a suit or litigation.
Synonym: litigant - One who sues, petitions, solicits, or entreats; a petitioner.
Synonyms: applicant, claimant, plaintiff, pursuer, suer
wooer
- Armenian: երկրպագու (hy) (erkrpagu)
- Bulgarian: ухажор (bg) m (uhažor)
- Catalan: pretendent (ca)
- Czech: nápadník (cs) m, ctitel m
- Danish: beljer c, frier c
- Dutch: huwelijkskandidaat (nl) m or f
- Finnish: kosiskelija (fi)
- French: prétendant (fr) m, soupirant (fr) m
- German: Freier (de) m, Liebeswerber m
- Greek: μνηστήρας (el) m (mnistíras)
Ancient Greek: παλαιστής m (palaistḗs), μνηστήρ m (mnēstḗr) - Hungarian: kérő (hu)
- Indonesian: perayu (id)
- Irish: suiríoch m
- Italian: postulante (it) m, richiedente (it) m, corteggiatore (it) m, pretendente (it) m
- Latin: procus m
- Māori: kaimātoro
- Old English: wōgere m
- Plautdietsch: Fria m
- Portuguese: pretendente m or f
- Romanian: pețitor (ro) m
- Russian: покло́нник (ru) m (poklónnik), покло́нница (ru) f (poklónnica), кавале́р (ru) m (kavalér), ухажёр (ru) m (uxažór), почита́тель (ru) m (počitátelʹ), почита́тельница (ru) f (počitátelʹnica)
- Sorbian:
Lower Sorbian: fryjaŕ m, fryjowaŕ m - Spanish: pretendiente (es) n, galanteador (es) m, cortejador (es) m, cortejante n
- Swedish: friare (sv) c
- Tagalog: manliligaw
- Welsh: ymgeisydd (cy) m
- Yiddish: אָווירער m (ovirer)
suitor (third-person singular simple present suitors, present participle suitoring, simple past and past participle suitored)
- To play the suitor; to woo; to make love.
Synonyms: court, romance; see also Thesaurus:woo
- William Dwight Whitney, Benjamin E[li] Smith, editors (1911), “suitor”, in The Century Dictionary […], New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., →OCLC.
- turios
- (Classical Latin) IPA(key): [ˈsu.ɪ.tɔr]
- (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): [ˈsuː.i.tor]
suitor
suitor m or n (feminine singular suitoare, masculine plural suitori, feminine/neuter plural suitoare)
suitor m (plural suitori)