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lady
[ley-dee]
noun
plural
ladiesa woman who is refined, polite, and well-spoken.
She may be poor and have little education, but she's a real lady.
a woman of high social position or economic class.
She was born a lady and found it hard to adjust to her reduced circumstances.
any woman; female (sometimes used in combination): There was a really nice saleslady at the counter who gave me some advice on what to buy.
The lady who answered the phone sounded a little stressed.
There was a really nice saleslady at the counter who gave me some advice on what to buy.
(used in direct address: usually offensive in the singular).
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome.
Lady, out of my way, please.
wife.
The ambassador and his lady arrived late.
Slang., a female lover or steady companion.
Lady, (in Great Britain) the proper title of any woman whose husband is higher in rank than baronet or knight, or who is the daughter of a nobleman not lower than an earl (although the title is given by courtesy also to the wives of baronets and knights).
a woman who has proprietary rights or authority, as over a manor; female feudal superior.
Lady, the Virgin Mary.
a woman who is the object of chivalrous devotion.
Usually Lady
an attribute or abstraction personified as a woman; a designation of an allegorical figure as feminine: Lady Virtue.
Lady Fortune;
Lady Virtue.
a title prefixed to the name of a goddess.
Lady Venus.
lady
1/ ˈleɪdɪ /
Lady
2/ ˈleɪdɪ /
noun
(in Britain) a title of honour borne by various classes of women of the peerage
a term of address to holders of the title Lady, used esp by servants
a title of the Virgin Mary
archaic, an allegorical prefix for the personifications of certain qualities
Lady Luck
the term of address by which certain positions of respect are prefaced when held by women
Lady Chairman
Sensitive Note
Other Word Forms
- ladyhood noun
- ladyish adjective
- ladyishly adverb
- ladyishness noun
- ladyless adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of lady1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
In a first for a first lady, she co-signed a piece of legislation into law when she joined her husband on stage to sign the bill.
In a statement, Ms Weeks' sisters and mother described her as "an absolutely beautiful young lady with a heart of gold".
"We've obviously very proud of her. Right now the world feels very divided but this little lady from North Yorkshire has really united people, and I think that's such a lovely, inspirational thing."
Marriage, he assured his audience, will “change your politics,” and he speculated that Swift would go from a “cat lady to a JD Vance supporter.”
“I feel like we’re in one of those Sunday night dramas about two bright-eyed, feisty old lady detectives outsmarting the police at every turn.”
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