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bloodsucker
noun
An animal that drinks the blood of others, especially by sucking blood through a puncture wound; a hemovore.
synonyms
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In the bloodsucker scheme, Congressmen, mayors and the ambulance vendor all shared in the bounty.
Between the vote-buying mensalão and the subsequent "bloodsucker" scandal (which involved selling overpriced ambulances to municipalities), 91 deputies and senators in the Congress whose term ended in December were accused of corruption.
The actor, who risks becoming typecast as a bloodsucker having appeared as the American president's vampire helper in Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter last year, is reportedly set to co-star in Universal's Dracula.
In the early 19th century the threat to the natural order was from men of science like Dr Frankenstein; by 1897 it was the aristocratic bloodsucker Count Dracula.
Although the gnat is closely related to mosquitoes, it is not a bloodsucker….
This term "bloodsucker," for instance--exactly what does it mean?
"A fatty," he called her. "A bloodsucker".
Its principal bloodsucker was a child, who befriended a lonely neighbor — a regular mortal — of her own age.
7 P.M. (Disney) MY BABYSITTER'S A VAMPIRE (2011) The geeky Ethan Matthew Knightt) and his best friend, Benny (Atticus Mitchell), learn that the beautiful yet mysterious 17-year-old baby sitter Sarah (Vanessa Morgan) is a fledgling bloodsucker.
Rollin's compulsive doubling moves into tripling as the bloodsucker in residence, Isolde (played by an actress with a single name, Dominique) goes after both the bride, Ise (Sandra Julien) and a local woman, Isabelle (Nicole Nancel), who was involved in a ménage à trois with the two undead cousins.
If you want to push a bloodsucker off the wagon, find her a virgin and stand back.
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