Get Free Checker
[ US /ˈtʃɑɹwʊmən/ ]
[ UK /t‍ʃˈɑːwʊmən/ ]
NOUN
  1. a human female employed to do housework
    the char will clean the carpet
    I have a woman who comes in four hours a day while I write

How To Use charwoman In A Sentence

  • I also told Miss Peabody to give the charwoman similar instructions. ABSOLUTE TRUTHS
  • A little while ago this praise would have made her glow sweetly, but now it tasted sour in her mouth; she did not particularly wish to be a magnificent cook-general, a magnificent charwoman. Married Life The True Romance
  • Nancy Sharman recalled that her mother, a Southampton charwoman, had no time to read until her last illness, at age 54.
  • Based on the police information, the blast injured three people, including cabob-dealer and charwoman. Today.Az
  • In the following six sections, the charwoman Mrs. McNab enters the house, ‘tearing the veil of silence’ of Charmichael's and Mr. Ramsay's poetic/metaphysical visions.
  • The majority of the repeat offenders who end up in the monkey house are Charwoman Charlenes, the daughters of charwomen who see no escape from the family business. This Week's Pattern Story - A Dress A Day
  • The charwoman who silently screws up her face in annoyance at Corey, who keeps her from doing her work, is Mary Gordon, a character actor in close to 300 films, many of them charwomen and landladies. The File on Thelma Jordon (1950)
  • Normally, the chef would call a charwoman to clean up that sort of mess. The Book of Unholy Mischief
  • I met a Battersea charwoman yesterday who was almost in tears because she lived on the wrong side of the street and couldn't vote for Saklatvala.
  • They had been lifted from a garbage can used by bureaucrats in some Soviet Russian Consulate, pilfered by what old British spy novelists used to call a "charwoman", in Yankee parlance, a janitor. Richard H. Smith: Could a California Budget Fix Threaten National Security?
View all