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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a vixen" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to refer to a female fox or, in a more colloquial sense, to describe a woman who is considered attractive or alluring, often with a connotation of being cunning or mischievous.
Example: "She walked into the room with the confidence of a vixen, capturing everyone's attention."
Alternatives: "a temptress" or "a siren".
Exact(57)
Laura's opposite is Sara Vancussy Juliana Smithh), the assistant district attorney, a steely, Type A vixen.
You let a vixen settle on your land.
And a vixen may have more to her life, too.
The image shows a vixen in a scarlet negligee.
Others imagine a vixen with darkly fetishistic leanings.
On Wednesday she didn't really play a vixen or a self-immolator or a campy diva.
She was a temptress and a vixen, and her name was Tokyo Rose.
He sleeps with a tame fox, a vixen, behind the shed in Holly's garden.
Similar(3)
The Gloucester-born 25-year-old has been a Vixens players for nine years.
Barcelona found that out when a Vixens side fighting to secure their top-flight status last season managed to knock them out of the Champions League in November in front of a club-record crowd of 2,457 at Ashton Gate.
A man, Clay Sharif Atkinss), rides the "flying underbelly of the city" on a hot summer evening, reading his magazine, when a vixen-like woman catches his eye.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com