Courting in a sentence as a noun

Others may feel like they're never going to get a raise unless they are courting or being courted actively.

I got a few people together and we came up with a plan for saving the Games brand by courting indie developers.

I had worked with one of the fellows, Dave McCall; furthermore he was courting our secretary at the time.

She is an investigative journalist who is no stranger to courting trouble.

You'd learn much more about that from simply dating/courting them - knowing about their spending/saving habits, profession, etc.

Yet venture capitalists ended up courting them and they raised money without even putting together a deck.

I think it was a Honda service manager courting a new mechanic, because they both had tools and the older guy had a "Honda" patch on his shirt.

With a strengthening RMB, flows/hot money is less likely to leave the country and the government is actively courting capital inflows.

They still have a lot of catch up to do with the marketplace and the ecosystem and with courting developers and manufacturers to their cause.

Whether you want non-competes and employer-friendly ownership laws over side projects depends on whether you're courting hedge funds or tech.

And bear with the cliche, but save the odd exception, an artists' life is almost always a compromise between staying true to one's principles and courting mainstream appeal.

In fact, if they actually are great people you'll be courting them, not the other way around, and they'll be bringing their own ideas to the table instead of sweating over whether they're conforming to your preconceptions.

Courting definitions

noun

a man's courting of a woman; seeking the affections of a woman (usually with the hope of marriage); "its was a brief and intense courtship"

See also: courtship wooing suit