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husbandless

/huhz-buhnd/US // ˈhʌz bənd //UK // (ˈhʌzbənd) //

无夫,无丈夫,没有丈夫,无夫之妇

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a married man, especially when considered in relation to his partner in marriage.
    • : British. a manager.
    • : Archaic. a prudent or frugal manager.
v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to manage, especially with prudent economy.
    • : to use frugally; conserve: to husband one's resources.
    • : Archaic. to be or become a husband to; marry.to find a husband for.to till; cultivate.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Former WNBA player Maya Moore and her husband Jonathan Irons have that kind of story.

  • My husband and I are so in love with her and she’s so in love with us and we get to keep her every weekend.

  • Saajan is mistakenly delivered a hot lunch intended for the ungrateful husband of an unhappy housewife, a man who doesn’t appreciate the care that’s gone into her cooking.

  • Luckily, I had my husband to remind me that I had taken quite the fixed mindset and I needed to work for it.

  • She went home told her husband, “Okay, we can’t move to Denver.”

  • Toomey lives here with her husband, Mark, a managing director at Goldman Sachs, and their two daughters.

  • Smith attended both funerals as a cop and as the husband of Police Officer Moira Smith, who died on 9/11.

  • As the protagonist gets herself off in front of her impotent husband, she moans “Oh, Gronky.”

  • Early on, the sexual protagonist complains that her Molson-drinking husband is pretty much an incompetent Neanderthal.

  • “Call me when the plane leaves the ground,” she said, in a tone that implied she knew her husband well.

  • M'Bongo, the great chief of this neighbourhood, paid a ceremonial visit to my husband.

  • My husband detests them; on the contrary, I like those carriages, for they tell me of happy—I mean to say, of former times.

  • A friend and companion meeting together in season, but above them both is a wife with her husband.

  • Not one woman in a thousand he knew would place a father before a husband; but his wife was different.

  • In the spring of 1877 Mrs. Kipling came to England to see her children, and was followed the next year by her husband.