NounFor writers, to blurb or not to blurb can be a tricky matter. … Blurb too often, or include too many blurbs on your book, and you might get called a blurb whore. Rachel Donadio, New York Times Book Review, 17 Aug. 2008It was only his vain desire to gain the money he needed to purchase the freedom of his beloved Sarah, a whore in a Sturgeon Street brothel, that had led him to offer his sword in the murderous service of Buljan … Michael Chabon, "Gentlemen of the Road,"in New York Times Magazine, 18 Feb. 2007I know one guy who became a television writer simply because it afforded him the opportunity to write on a cop show and name all the strippers, crack whores, and nude female corpses after his mother. Rob Long, National Review, 19 Feb. 2001VerbBabe Ruth, who could cuss, guzzle and whore to outdo any sailor of legend, was also the most genial and accommodating of men. Stephen Jay Gould, New York Times Book Review, 7 May 1989
Word History
Etymology
Noun and Verb
Middle English hore, from Old English hōre; akin to Old Norse hōra whore, hōrr adulterer, Latin carus dear — more at charity
First Known Use
Noun
before the 12th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1