On the phone with a fund raiser from Florida, Farmer is the consummate flatterer.
From the time.com
Scott McCormick plays the oily prosecutor El-Fayoumy, a comical flatterer.
From the washingtonpost.com
He was a shameless flatterer who fired a secretary for flattering him.
From the time.com
On the instructor spectrum, Spearman is neither a drill sergeant nor a smarmy flatterer.
From the nytimes.com
An insincere flatterer is a stock character in many literary works.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Only the shameless flatterer, Martial, ventured to call his friend a poet as great as Virgil.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Lievens spent a couple of years in England, home of the great court portraitist and flatterer Sir Anthony van Dyck.
From the washingtonpost.com
Man's best friend or food-grubbing flatterer?
From the usatoday.com
He said, the flatterer, that I was very funny and should be on 7 Days and that he'd have a word to the producer.
From the nzherald.co.nz
More examples
A person who uses flattery
Flattery (also called adulation or blandishment) is the act of giving excessive compliments, generally for the purpose of ingratiating oneself with the subject.
One who flatters
(1) one whose throat is an open coffin. (2) flatterers look like friends, as wolves like dogs. Like cats, they lick and then scratch. (3) one who says to your face what they wouldn't say behind your back.