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- Origin of milady - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
According to the Oxford English Dictionary, milady emerged in 1778 that partially came from French: Partly < French milady , title used when addressing or speaking of an English lady of high rank (1727 in Voltaire; 1754 as milédi ) < English my lady (see lady n 3a), and partly representing a colloquial pronunciation of my lady (see above)
- meaning - Can you still call a woman handsome? - English Language . . .
Right, I have heard it being used in the manner you've talked about before, but I wasn't sure if there was a hidden subtext of irony there or not A kind of delicate way to say "that woman looks like a man!" In this movie, Lady Penbroke really couldn't be described as such; even with the getup and everything, she looked "classically beautiful "
- Where did Shakespeare get milk of human kindness from?
Lady Macbeth wants to substitute her milk (which would nourish a kid) for gall, which today would mean boldness and impertinence, but also refers to bile (Merriam-Webster) So here, too, the milk is too kind, too nourishing, and so it must be switched for something more murderous so that she can physically and mentally go through with murder
- Is there any female equivalent to ‘Esq’ or ‘Esquire’?
The short answer is no The long answer: First, from Wikipedia, Esquire British men invited to Buckingham Palace receive their invitations in an envelope with the suffix Esq after their names, while men of foreign nationalities instead have the prefix Mr (women are addressed as Miss, Ms, or Mrs) [21]
- How does one write the name of a married female and spouse in a list of . . .
I'm not sure whether 'Mrs' or 'Ms' is preferred when the context clearly shows that the lady is married I'm old-fashioned enough to think it should be 'Mrs', but modern style might use 'Ms' The referenced URL did not place brackets around the maiden name
- Why does this Ladies First saying exist?
A gentleman will always follow a lady when going up stairs, in case she should fall over A gentleman will always precede a lady going down stairs for the same reason In both cases a gentleman would never stare, indecently or otherwise, at any parts of a ladies anatomy –
- Why is “bloody” considered offensive in the UK but not in the US?
I don't think it's obscene so much as profane By one theory, "Bloody" in this context is a contraction for "by our lady", essentially swearing by the Virgin Mary (Bloody in Wikipedia) Other similar oaths include "blimey" (God blind me) and "gadzooks" (by God's hooks (hands))
- How did the word beaver come to be associated with vagina?
It is quite astonishing that the "young lady named Eva" limerick's takeoff on the street game of Beaver—a game that seems to have hastened the demise of the beard during the early decades of the twentieth century—has evidently had far more cultural staying power (as judged by popular slang) than the original game itself
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