lady crab
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The entry for 'lady' is displayed below.
Also see: crab
The entry for 'lady' is displayed below.
Also see: crab
Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
lady/ˈleɪdi/
▶noun (pl. ladies)
- 1 (in polite or formal use) a woman.
- 2 a woman of superior social position.
■ (Lady) (in the UK) a title used by peeresses, female relatives of peers, the wives and widows of knights, etc.
■ a courteous or genteel woman.
- 3 (one's lady) dated a man's wife.
■ historical a woman to whom a knight is chivalrously devoted.
- 4 (the Ladies) Brit. a women's public toilet.
– phrases
find the lady another term for three-card trick.
it isn't over till the fat lady sings there is still time for a situation to change. [by assoc. with the final aria in tragic opera.]
Lady Muck see muck.
My Lady a polite form of address to female judges and certain noblewomen.
find the lady another term for three-card trick.
it isn't over till the fat lady sings there is still time for a situation to change. [by assoc. with the final aria in tragic opera.]
Lady Muck see muck.
My Lady a polite form of address to female judges and certain noblewomen.
– derivatives
ladyhood noun.
ladyhood noun.
word history: The forerunner of the word lady in Old English was hlǣfdīge, meaning the female head of a household, or a woman to whom homage or obedience was due, such as the wife of a lord or, specifically, the Virgin Mary. The word came from hlāf ‘loaf’ and a Germanic base meaning ‘knead’ which is related to dough and dairy; thus a lady was a ‘loaf kneader’. The word lord developed in a similar way; in Old English it literally meant ‘bread keeper’.

