What's the difference between dalliance and flirtation?

Dalliance


Definition:

  • (n.) The act of dallying, trifling, or fondling; interchange of caresses; wanton play.
  • (n.) Delay or procrastination.
  • (n.) Entertaining discourse.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Here's as good a precis of this game so far as you'll read, courtesy of Matt Dony: "Watching this game is like flicking back and forth between, say, Barcelona vs Spain, and QPR vs Sunderland circa their last dalliance with the Premier League.
  • (2) Where we already have the electoral numbers, our political vengeance has been merciless against the GOP; witness California after its electoral dalliance with anti-immigrant policies or Mitt Romney’s disastrous 2012 campaign .
  • (3) Putin has long been rumoured to have had a series of dalliances with much younger women, and there has been speculation that he fathered a child with a former Olympic gymnast.
  • (4) It has been clear for some time that the dalliance with Labour is over and that the financiers were about to come out in their true colours.
  • (5) His dalliance during the 1990s with Sudan's president Omar al-Bashir has left a lasting enmity with many leaders in the Dinka community, South Sudan's largest tribe, from which Kiir hails.
  • (6) She grew up in a Wellington suburb, and wanted to be an actor from the age of six; after a brief dalliance with university, she headed to drama school.
  • (7) Although MI5 had known about Profumo's dalliance with Keeler for many months, the first politician to learn about it was John Lewis, the former Labour MP for Bolton, who mistakenly thought Stephen Ward had seduced his wife.
  • (8) This was no brief dalliance: Hitchens was a member for many years, leaving in his mid-20s.
  • (9) Was it OK that, as Linda McDougall recalls , he occupied the medical room at the Look North studios for his dalliances with "lady friends" or that "he was one of those people who had his hands all over you and all over any female that came in".
  • (10) Dominic Fifield Florian Thauvin’s three Premier League starts after a £12m move from Marseille probably drew the line under Newcastle’s dalliance with the French market, particularly as he ended the season back at Stade Vélodrome on loan.
  • (11) Did Flavor Flav's dalliance with reality TV (4) dilute Public Enemy's potency?
  • (12) He said that his novels were not selling any more and were not getting any better, though at least one, Consider the Lilies (1968) is still very funny and readable (the others are Path of Dalliance, 1963, Who Are the Violets Now, 1966, and A Bed of Flowers, 1971).
  • (13) It's seen most clearly in France, where privacy law often interferes with news organisations' ability to publish information about the dalliances of politicians.
  • (14) Nespresso's velvety crema and its darkling thimble of ristretto daily give me the illusion I am a sophisticated continental, living in caffeinated leisure at a pavement cafe where only lovely things – passionate dalliances, superb cakes – are on today's menu.
  • (15) But as well as a place for such dalliances, it was also "a bordello, a whorehouse", with clients making use of the four or five hotel rooms above the bar, according to Mizrahi.
  • (16) After tennis, he became infamous for his rightwing political views, including a dalliance with the National Front.
  • (17) Some high calibre movement and slick one-touch stuff from a forward clearly being fast forgiven for that summertime dalliance with Arsenal prompted Liverpool fans to sing: "Luis Suárez; he can bite who he wants."
  • (18) Super-injunctions have been granted to footballers and to a married actor who is said to have paid for sex with a prostitute who previously had a dalliance with Wayne Rooney.
  • (19) This was indirectly confirmed by official North Korean documents recently: when Jang Song Taek was purged in December 2013, the indictment mentioned both his fondness for private rooms in the expensive restaurants and his dalliances with women.
  • (20) It even promoted a growing welfare state under Chamberlain and postwar Butskellism , a dalliance that did not fundamentally alter under Thatcher, Blair or Cameron.

Flirtation


Definition:

  • (n.) Playing at courtship; coquetry.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) More likely though was that the Foreign Office, which has deep misgivings about the flirtation, would now seek to reassert its control over China policy and cool relations with the world’s second-largest economy.
  • (2) Before what is bound to be a gossip-fuelled party conference season in which Lib Dem flirtation with Labour (and vice versa) will be added to the mix of plotting, irresistible visions of the future home into view.
  • (3) They argue it is facing a funding crisis of up to £150m a year because it has embarked on failed business ventures, including an expensive flirtation with digital radio, and spent too much on US imports.
  • (4) George Osborne’s brief post-referendum flirtation with a low corporation tax regime was ended by his sacking in July.
  • (5) Often, Hofer’s flirtation with the iconography and language of the National Socialist movement has been far from covert.
  • (6) Erdogan's regional foreign policy initiatives, his flirtation with Iran, his split with Israel, and his courting of supposedly suspect countries such as Syria have led western commentators to speculate about a "strategic realignment" in Turkish policy, away from the west and Nato and towards the Arab and Muslim worlds, in parallel with the AKP's pursuit of a neo-Islamist agenda at home.
  • (7) In a blog published on Friday afternoon entitled "My teenage mistakes" , Weldon said his year-long flirtation would have remained the embarrassing stuff of his youth had he not a few years later done what he described as a "dumb thing" and boasted about his past in an Oxford student newspaper.
  • (8) Only the flirtation between Shirley and Phil offered any comedy.
  • (9) A controversial Daily Star front page, with the headline "English Defence League to become a political party", was "not a flirtation, but a wake-up call", he insists, and Desmond, whose Jewishness is never far from his thinking, says it would be ridiculous for him to back far-right politics.
  • (10) James Milner is yet to accept the offer of a new contract and may well use his free agent status to move to a club that can offer more regular first-team starts, and Yaya Touré has begun his annual flirtation with the transfer market via the unsubtle declarations of his agent.
  • (11) Clegg's shift in affection follows similar flirtation between senior members of his party and Labour, notably Ed Balls, in recent months.
  • (12) Women waited, made ourselves presentable, and hoped flirtations with the object of our interest would lead to an ask-out.
  • (13) 8.02pm BST Summary Here's a summary of where things stand: • The president lamented damage from the government shutdown and flirtation with default .
  • (14) These have been described as including: vanity, 'buzz', flirtation, a sense of power and control and professional advantage during employment within the MPS or to gain future employment elsewhere."
  • (15) Jonathan Arnott said the fracas placed a cloud over both Woolfe and Hookem: “Surely they can’t now consider that either of them could stand in a leadership contest.” Gerard Batten said he was disappointed Woolfe had left the meeting rather than answer questions over his flirtation with the Conservatives: “A Ukip MEP who is prepared to even discuss defection to another party is not fit to run as leader of Ukip.” Describing Thursday’s incident, Hookem said a meeting of Ukip MEPs had become heated when Woolfe, a contender to replace Diane James as party leader, was asked about his admission he had considered defecting to the Conservatives .
  • (16) Excerpts from the diary show him to be a liberal-minded man and one fond of the company of young people; and show Betty to be a sprightly young Quakeress, buffeted by emotional conflicts between loyalty to her north-country fiance and her flirtation with young Dr. John Coakley Lettsom.
  • (17) Policy makers had a brief flirtation with Keynes back in the winter of 2008-09, but are now intent on cutting deficits and balancing budgets.
  • (18) Updated at 7.14pm BST 6.58pm BST The flirtation with default has inspired some colorful analogies .
  • (19) Norman is understood to take a dim view of their vocal interference in the chief executive search, and particularly the flirtation with former BSkyB boss Tony Ball.
  • (20) - and trades favourite Hank moments (his being Kingsley's ill-fated, careerist flirtation with Judaism).

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