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Delilah
(redirected from femme fatale)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.03 sec.
Delilah (dĭlī`lə), in the Book of Judges, courtesan in the pay of the Philistines, perhaps a Philistine herself, who was loved by Samson Samson, in the Bible, judge of Israel. His long hair was a symbol of his vows to God, and because of this covenant Samson was strong. The enemies of his people, the Philistines, accomplished his destruction through the woman Delilah.
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. She learned that his strength lay in his long hair and betrayed him to his enemies by cutting it off.
Delilah
Samson's Philistine mistress, who deprived him of his strength by cutting off his hair (Judges 16:4--22)

Delilah
fascinating and deceitful mistress of Samson. [O.T.: Judges 16]
See : Seduction

Delilah
divulged secret of Samson’s strength to Philistines. [O.T.: Judges 16:19–20]
See : Treachery

Delilah
tricks Samson into revealing secret of his strength. [O.T.: Judges 16:6–21]
See : Trickery


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The tough, cynical private eye that may not be as crooked as he seems, the intricate plot, the femme fatale, the outsized villains, the object of lust and desire--it's all here.
September 15 (Universal) Noir is back: Femme fatale Hitary Swank recounts a sapphic past with Mia Kirshner in Brian De Palma's new thriller about one of Los Angeles's most notorious true crimes.
There's a femme fatale (Connie Nielsen, always a welcome screen presence), a drunken clown (Oliver Platt, over-the-top as usual, but pretty funny in spots), plenty of on-screen vomit, the ironic inclusion of Alvin and the Chipmunks and lots and lots of snow in a Midwest winter that is anything but a wonderland.
 
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