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"dally with" Definitions
  1. (old-fashioned) to treat somebody/something in a way that is not serious enough
"dally with" Antonyms

13 Sentences With "dally with"

How to use dally with in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "dally with" and check conjugation/comparative form for "dally with". Mastering all the usages of "dally with" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Xander might dally with women, but it's mayhem that owns his heart.
They dally with Rousseau's general will, urging newcomers to assimilate, but tread lightly on race and culture, which are not shared.
Elsewhere Rihanna eagerly thumbs through disparate styles: "Consideration" tries out lumbering Portishead trip-hop, while "Kiss It Better" and "Desperado" dally with moody rock vibes.
Again, rightfully so: There's only so much exposition that can happen in an hour, and the show would rather swoop in in medias res than dilly-dally with small talk.
They know better, as do other Republican leaders who dally with Johnson, about the damage that Trump could do, and about who in America might be left to drown. ♦
An update to the Uber app noticed by a high profile user on Monday revealed that tardy app users will now have less time to dally, with the penalty being additional charges.
Now is the time for Congress to actually do something inspired to get Beijing's attention, rather than dilly-dally with the toothless but "feel-good" Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act.
Perhaps foremost, the luxury of time allows Davies' treatment to highlight the class disparities and political inequity that are at the heart of Hugo's story, showing the licentious, privileged young men that dally with Fantine and her friends but then run back to Paris, abandoning her with a child and scant means of support.
Whenever the nobleman visits his country estates, the king visits his wife, but secretly lusts after men. Instead of going to his estates, the nobleman now goes to the castle to dally with the queen, while the king commits adultery with his wife. The affairs continue for years, well into the couples’ old age. Like many stories of this sort, Saffredent’s tale deals with the theme of cuckoldry and depends on both dramatic and situational irony for its plot and effects.
His wife Henrietta, their two children William (Willy) and Henrietta (Dally) with Caroline Bowles his sister-in-law accompanied him. After a short stay in Sydney the family travelled to Yass where Yaldwyn purchased of land freehold from the New South Wales Government. William and Henrietta had their third child in Yass called Burton born on 19 September 1837. Yaldwyn sent trusted friend John Coppock (1795-1865) to Port Phillip to source a station there and in about September 1838 the Yaldwyn family occupied the station called "Barfold" near Kyneton.
In ancient Athens, sexual attraction between men was the norm. In the Levant, however, persons who committed homosexual acts were stoned to death at the same period in history that young Alcibiades attempted to seduce Socrates to glean wisdom from him. As presented by Plato in his Symposium, Socrates did not "dally" with young Alcibiades, and instead treated him as his father or brother would when they spent the night sharing a blanket. In Xenophon's Symposium Socrates strongly speaks against men kissing each other, saying that doing so will make them slavish, i.e.
Fifteen-year-old Angela Doolan (Goethals) has the potential to be a sports superstar but worries about losing her normality and severing her family ties. Angela's father has deserted the family to rediscover his youth and dally with younger women, leaving her mother Dianne (Light) to raise her children (including older son Brian and youngest daughter Mary Margaret) and try to keep a lid on her bitterness. Added to the fray is Angela's obsessive tennis coach Lou (Devane), who is determined to bring out the champion in Angela regardless of the cost to her growth as a person.
Catherine starts to dally with the King's groom, Thomas Culpepper, and is encouraged by her senior lady-in-waiting, Lady Rochford — Henry's sister-in-law — who is also being bedded by Culpepper. In Episode 2, Henry invites his former wife, Anne of Cleves, to court to celebrate Christmas as he wants to reward her for keeping her word to him and for her loyalty. She, in turn, is grateful for the charity he has shown towards her. After the festivities, he is struck down once again by his leg wound — from his former jousting days — while Catherine is with Culpepper.

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