Gentleman & Ky Mani Marley Conversations Download



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  1. 25 synonyms of gentleman from the Merriam-Webster Thesaurus, plus 55 related words, definitions, and antonyms. Find another word for gentleman. Gentleman: a man of high birth or social position.
  2. GENTLEMAN & KY-MANI MARLEY CONVERSATIONS. And this is one reason why the title of the album by GENTLEMAN. Gentleman's Discography.

25 synonyms of gentleman from the Merriam-Webster Thesaurus, plus 55 related words, definitions, and antonyms. Find another word for gentleman. Gentleman: a man of high birth or social position. Guy Ritchie's 'The Gentlemen ' plays like a tall tale, a yarn heard at the corner pub, filled with exaggerations and embellishments, where the storyteller expects you to pay his bar tab at the end. And maybe you won't mind doing so.

Gentleman & Ky Mani Marley Conversations Download

noungentlemen

  • 1A chivalrous, courteous, or honourable man.

    • ‘He was always the perfect gentleman, courteous and kind in his dealings with others.’
    • ‘‘He was an honourable man and a gentleman and brightened every room with his presence,’ his older brother Keenan last night said.’
    • ‘I'd like to point out that I was the perfect gentlemen throughout, and my question was as a result of the picture next to the chatbox - I was wondering how intelligent she was.’
    • ‘My parents had been in on this plan for the last six weeks, because as my dad informed me, Jeff had been a perfect gentleman, and asked their blessing before proposing to me.’
    • ‘Maybe I just favored Nick's view because he's always been a perfect gentleman every time I've met him.’
    • ‘Jessica smiled as she followed him to his table, he pulled her chair out for her like the perfect gentlemen he was or was most of the time anyway.’
    • ‘We walked up to the whites hill reserve and I got mud all over my white denim jeans, Anthony holding onto my waist and being a perfect gentleman.’
    • ‘Dylan, being a perfect gentleman (how cute, I might add), opened the door for me.’
    • ‘Robinson was a gentleman, unfailingly courteous, with inexhaustible enthusiasm.’
    • ‘The actor endeared himself to the locals as a real gentleman, modest and polite and always ready to meet the people.’
    • ‘Staff described him as a man who had time for everyone and was always polite and a true gentleman.’
    • ‘A gentleman to his fingertips, Mattie commanded great regard and respect wherever he went.’
    • ‘There are few men left in this world and I'm almost positive gentlemen are extinct.’
    • ‘Far from it, they are good men, true gentlemen, and deservedly interesting characters in their own right.’
    • ‘It's nice being around guys that are gentlemen.’
    • ‘They say matter-of-factly that the males around them do not know how to act like either men or gentlemen.’
    • ‘They appreciate their men for being gentlemen and treating them like women.’
    • ‘Women still found it desirable to behave in a ladylike manner and men strove to be gentlemen.’
    • ‘All of the townspeople were courteous and kind, and even the young men became complete gentlemen whenever she was near.’
    • ‘Sheila said he had been a gentleman, a man of dignity and integrity, who always had a smile on his face and was proud to be from York.’
    1. 1.1A man of good social position, especially one of wealth and leisure.
      ‘At social gatherings eligible gentlemen would draw lots bearing ladies' names on the eve of St Valentine's Day.’
      • ‘It seems as if everyone is so concerned with reputation and wealth and well-founded gentlemen.’
      • ‘Perhaps it was then that within the Royal Navy an officer's entry status was that of an officer by education and a gentleman by social background and manners.’
      • ‘But for a gentleman of Arthur's wealth and taste, surely a more conventional beauty would have been appropriate?’
      • ‘What writers have to remember is that their precious novels are not read by leisured gentlemen, for two or three hours at a time, in the peace and quiet of a country-house library.’
      • ‘Over time the issue was complicated by the idea of the gentleman, a social construct which could incorporate all members of the peerage and gentry.’
      • ‘He had some medical training, then spent the rest of his life as a leisured gentleman in Dublin and London.’
      • ‘It's for the civilised gentlemen of Edinburgh, men like me who relish the finer things in life.’
      • ‘As to good breeding, the new gentlemen in Australia pushed their ancestors as far up the social scale as they dared.’
      • ‘He gazes at us with disdain; the epitome of a Georgian gentleman, secure in the trappings of his position, his satin waistcoat barely restraining his ample paunch.’
      • ‘The nature of the Civil War battlefield reinforced this gentlemen's dynamic because men could actually observe one another in combat.’
      • ‘That the men are well-dressed gentlemen is not lost on Mary, who witnesses the abduction.’
      • ‘It was common practice for a gentleman to make a financial commitment to an actress or a courtesan he wanted to keep.’
      • ‘They generally have been to the good universities and are members of the better gentlemen's clubs in Melbourne and Sydney.’
      • ‘A Texan gentleman with private means, he has been the eminence grise behind four relatively liberal Texas governors.’
      • ‘It's dressed up as a 200-year-old tradition - gentlemen making formal wagers for port or champagne in a beautiful leather-bound ledger.’
      • ‘The book opens with Smith's capable pursuit of a disoriented country gentleman.’
      • ‘Nineteenth-century British society distinguished clearly between aristocrats, gentlemen, and common workingmen.’
      • ‘It's been said that golf is the sport of noblemen and gentlemen, which might explain why the game's in quite so much trouble.’
      • ‘General Brice took their hands into his, kissing Daria's like a country gentleman.’
    2. 1.2A man of noble birth attached to a royal household.
      • ‘He is an officer and a gentleman by royal decree.’
      • ‘The second man was in the North, a gentleman by birth.’
      • ‘Tall, well built, handsome, intelligent, graceful, he was everything a gentleman and noble should be.’
      • ‘Spenser informed Ralegh that his ‘general end’ was ‘to fashion a gentleman or noble person in virtuous and gentle discipline’.’
      • ‘There is no such thing as class among the truly noble, among compleat gentlemen.’
      • ‘Due to the diligence of the admiral and good support from the Royal Tribunal, all the gentlemen and noblemen, and all those who had a horse in the city followed him.’
      • ‘Even in locations where members of the royal family were due to stay in the home of a local gentleman, knight or nobleman, further lodgings were needed in the vicinity for the large number of other personnel in the train.’
      • ‘A gentleman or a person of noble birth to be seen perspiring wasn't recommended.’
      • ‘This was certainly good food by Tudor standards but it paled compared to the sumptuous meals served to the more senior courtiers, such as the gentlemen of the privy chamber.’
      • ‘He led the way to the royal stables, the rest if his gentlemen following him.’
      • ‘In the Victorian world presented in the film, the gentlemen of the aristocracy believe that moral progress is symbolized by the very fact of their wealth and power.’
      • ‘While gentlemen of the aristocracy lounged at the National Theatre, drunken throngs hooted at busty showgirls in the latest burlesque revues.’
      • ‘The ladies rode on palfreys or were drawn on litters, escorted by gentlemen, squires and pages, with trumpeters, drummers and minstrels.’
      • ‘Great aristocrats no more become gentlemen of the bedchamber out of subservience than they became grooms of the stool out of a desire to wipe the royal bottom.’
      • ‘The amount of campaign furniture that would have accompanied an officer and a gentleman such as Lord Auckland was on a scale worthy of the British Empire itself.’
      • ‘The English were in the overall command of Charles, Lord Cornwallis, a gentleman from Wessex.’
      • ‘For British High Society, the Ascot meeting is the fashion event of the year, with the ladies parading in full finery and gentlemen sporting elegant top hats and tails in the Royal enclosure.’
      • ‘Hunting and hawking were popular among the gentlemen of early Tudor England because they enjoyed it, but there was more to this interest than the obsession of the enthusiast.’
      • ‘He was made a gentleman of the bedchamber and employed on important diplomatic and military missions.’
      • ‘He was knighted, given the estates of the abbey of Wilton, and appointed a gentleman of the bedchamber.’
  • 2A polite or formal way of referring to a man.

    • ‘can I help you, gentlemen?’
    • ‘On this woman's right, on the other side of the table from Stanson, two older English-looking gentlemen sat quietly.’
    • ‘On the bus on my way home, I was very polite to an elderly gentleman by offering him my side of the seat where he'd be more comfortable.’
    • ‘In addition, instead of fashionably dressed young ladies stationed at the gate to usher in the movie-goers, formally attired old gentlemen will be assigned to do the job.’
    • ‘He was the only distinguished looking gentleman wearing a black cape with a scarlet lining.’
    • ‘Her daughter, Shirley, had married a bearded gentleman by the name of Thomas Garner.’
    • ‘I want to thank these two gentlemen for serving their country so well and so admirably.’
    • ‘I was walking along the Venice Beach walk when I passed two gentlemen wearing suits.’
    • ‘Anyway - halfway through the evening I met this charming shirtless gentleman called Claudio.’
    • ‘Could you ask the gentleman next to you whether he is the applicant.’
    • ‘A gentleman by the name of Martin responded to my e-mail.’
    • ‘Jo entered the sunroom, followed by a gentleman in a suit and glasses.’
    • ‘A moment later a somewhat short gentleman in a simple black suit entered Christopher's office.’
    • ‘Music and song were close to his heart and he was a welcome gentleman at any social occasion in the village and neighbourhood.’
    • ‘The young gentleman looked positively delighted that she had noticed him.’
    • ‘Plenty of biographies have been written about each of these gentlemen individually.’
    • ‘For those of you who visited York Livestock Centre, you will remember the bewhiskered gentleman who manned the sweetshop and tended the gardens.’
    • ‘‘In Texas, I heard that a gentleman won the contest through a local radio station,’ Renna says.’
    • ‘The first gentleman behind the counter said they didn't make their ground beef with chuck.’
    • ‘They must be upstanding young gentlemen to be hanging around you two, ' Sarah inserted plainly.’
    • ‘I exclaimed, my mouth agape and my finger pointing straight at the gentleman in question.’
    1. 2.1Used as a courteous title for a male fellow member of the House of Commons or the House of Representatives.
      • ‘Senator, thank you for joining us, a fine gentleman and a fine representative from the state of Missouri.’
      • ‘In the tradition of the House, the gentleman from Texas is recognized for 5 minutes.’
      • ‘And ladies and gentlemen of the Congress, I thank you, their representatives, for what you have already done and for what we will do together.’
      • ‘And accordingly Mr Speaker gave the thanks of the house to Major Clayton, chairman, and the rest of the gentlemen of the said committee.’
      • ‘I often wonder, if the honourable gentleman was Speaker, whether he would then be able to confront some of the difficulties of his own questions and requests.’
Mani

Origin

Middle English (in the sense ‘man of noble birth’): from gentle+ man, translating Old French gentilz hom. In later use the term denoted a man of a good family (especially one entitled to a coat of arms) but not of the nobility.

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