Similar words: heroic, heroism, asteroid, purloined, marie antoinette, roil, adroit, broiler. Meaning: ['herəʊɪn] n. 1. the main good female character in a work of fiction 2. a woman possessing heroic qualities or a woman who has performed heroic deeds.
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31. Luks's heroine seemed to relish her seductive power.
32. The story is narrated entirely by the heroine.
33. The heroine, Maryska, is the personification of female sexuality.
34. Constantly overwrought, sometimes embarrassing in her alcohol and pharmaceutical-induced sorrows, Leo could have been a typical Almodovar comic heroine.
35. Classic gothic tale complete with governess heroine, malevolent atmosphere, and forbidding mansion.
36. The novel's heroine, Kate Lee, is born in the South at the turn of the century.
37. At the end she asks whether in all her stories she has been, not the heroine, but the villain.
38. Above all, we still find the role of Diana as glamorous heroine appealing.
39. You control our heroine Jill as she battles with different creatures in her search for weapons, gems and health giving food.
40. She seems to see herself as some kind of romantic heroine in a trashy novel.
41. Irene the heroine is a journalist from an upper middle-class family engaged to be married to an army officer.
42. He tried hard not to admire or approve of the heroine, tried to imagine that life was not like that really.
43. We do not know whether she will end up in history as a heroine or a villain.
44. She would be around forty but had the appearance of a heroine in a Victorian novel - tall, willowy, ethereal.
45. The movie's young heroine lies, cheats, and steals to get what she wants.
46. She the heroine entrapped by family expectations; he a faithful and stoic[sentencedict.com], if unimaginative hero.
47. To my children, I am not a heroine of social change.
48. She is selfless in religious commitment, yet delights in displaying herself in print as a spiritual heroine.
49. How beautiful is youth! How bright it gleams with its illusions, aspirations, dreams! Book of Beginnings, Story without End, Each maid a heroine, and each man a friend! Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
50. The hero or heroine must ultimately come out on top.
51. Yes, your heroine will be united with her destined mate.
52. The national media made her a heroine, status richly deserved, and the sympathy grew even more.
53. The heroine of her latest novel is a middle-class English woman.
54. Thus, for Austen's heroine, Elizabeth Bennet, marriage was not just important,[sentencedict.com/heroine.html] it was compulsory.
55. This is an epic of Oprah's age, with an engaging heroine whose life story is well-made, but essentially insignificant.
56. In Mary Barton the working-class heroine and her husband go off to the colonies to start a new life.
57. Another important instance of courtly behaviour is when the hero has to lead the heroine into the dance.
58. Part of the problem is that the movie presents a heroine primed with empty ambition, but makes no comment on it.
59. That heroine of Assassins had distended her jaws and throat and belly by means of Polymorphine, like a python.
60. The heroine collects champagne glasses, and recommends the drink as a diuretic.