succubuslike
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Adjective
[edit]succubuslike (comparative more succubuslike, superlative most succubuslike)
- Resembling or characteristic of a succubus; wickedly seductive.
- 1995, Marshall Brown, The uses of literary history, page 184:
- Unlike jokes and coincidences, the stereotype is an inveterate boundary crosser; it returns, succubuslike, at times of crisis or shifts of perspective, in literary history.
- 2009 June 28, John Anderson, “His Weird Side: That’s Where the Fun Is”, in New York Times[1]:
- They included “Malice,” “The Serpent and the Rainbow” and ‘The Last Seduction,” in which a succubuslike Linda Fiorentino steals Mr. Pullman’s drug money.