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gentlewoman
[ jen-tl-woom-uhn ]
gentlewoman
/ ˈɛԳəˌʊə /
noun
- archaic.a woman regarded as being of good family or breeding; lady
- rare.a woman who is cultured, courteous, and well-educated
- history a woman in personal attendance on a high-ranking lady
Derived Forms
- ˈԳٱˌɴdzԱ, adjective
- ˈԳٱˌɴdzԱԱ, noun
Other Word Forms
- t·ɴdza· adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of gentlewoman1
Example Sentences
The Lady was established in 1885 by Thomas Gibson Bowles, as a magazine for gentlewomen, a weekly guide to navigating the social minefield of well-to-do British life.
She thinks it matters that Chenery engaged with fans as “a perfect gentlewoman.”
“I support repealing these tax credits,” he replied, offering only the noncommittal promise to “continue to work with the gentlewoman from Virginia, just like we will with all members.”
One of his stories is about a Southern gentlewoman who keeps her dead fiance’s corpse in her bed.
As usually performed, it is the distasteful tale of a callow playboy named Bertram who treats the friend who loves him — Helen, a young “gentlewoman” of his mother’s household — as a discardable childhood toy.
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