Swoon in a sentence as a noun

" I've been trying to argue this for years.

Why didn't they swoon and drop their pants and beg to be taken on the spot?

... and when they stop, we can swoon over the tech advances of the new player.

For example, they gaze into WarCraft, swoon, and realise they need to stay away.

The founder of reddit throwing a "nailed it" at me is kind of a swoon-worthy moment.

Even user-created maps would be enough to make Pokemon fans swoon.

"Your idea makes me swoon, but I think it'll never happen because that isn't the vision Twitter has, not because it's too late.

I understand it because I'm technical, but it's not something people would immediately swoon and say "I love it.

Swoon in a sentence as a verb

Of course the Dutch are also leaders in highly designed shared streets that make the hippest of the hipster urban designers in the US swoon with envy.

Seriously?WP 8 has some incredibly original features my Android and Apple friends swoon over.

I can see how it would make maintaining existant relationships difficult, but this kind of thing makes twentysomethings who don't know you swoon in my experience.

They're human beings and will swoon over beautiful pixels like anybody else, but if your application effectively solves their problem, that's what they're going to care about.

Blessed with an air of power that masks an unmistakable cute, cuddly side, Kim made this newspaper's editorial board swoon with his impeccable fashion sense, chic short hairstyle, and, of course, that famous smile.

So, and I'm honestly curious here because I'm in the market, what is the best Linux laptop out there?I hear people swoon over a particular Lenovo/Thinkpad model, but have no idea which one it is.

So this isn't okay but Google hiring pro lobbyists to swoon politicians for favorable laws isn't?We need to get over this ideal that just because a company is in tech it's somehow "above" the business as usual tactics that have worked for generations.

Swoon definitions

noun

a spontaneous loss of consciousness caused by insufficient blood to the brain

See also: faint syncope deliquium

verb

pass out from weakness, physical or emotional distress due to a loss of blood supply to the brain

See also: faint conk