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landlady

[ UK /lˈændle‍ɪdi/ ]
[ US /ˈɫændˌɫeɪdi/ ]
NOUN
  1. a landlord who is a woman

How To Use landlady In A Sentence

  • The inn we occupied had one of these porches: Madame Barbot, our landlady, and her maid, were both dressed in Breton costume, with lace-trimmed embroidered caps and aprons of fine muslin, clear-starched and ironed with a perfection which the most accomplished "blanchisseuse du fin" of Paris would find it difficult to surpass. Brittany & Its Byways
  • It was just as well he didn't as he stayed cooped up in his landlady's house. Times, Sunday Times
  • His landlady had treated him like a dangerous criminal, a pariah.
  • Just write something katharsis keeping going kent kew landlady problems Going like a bush fire...
  • Now the landlady really does have to do something.
  • Her own brother Theo despised cats, the Major complained when Sidhi dug in his flower beds, Duncan treated him with polite indifference, Felicity pronounced him unsanitary, and Meg lived in a bed-sit in Kilburn with a landlady she described as ferocious—no good prospects there. All Shall Be Well
  • I don't blame the absent landlady either, obviously, because that would be irrational in the extreme.
  • A terrible old woman, with landlady written large all over her face and person, opened the door, and, without paying the slightest attention to me, began to rate the shopboy in no measured terms. Memoirs of Sir Wemyss Reid 1842-1885
  • My landlady, Ita, needs this week's rent, or she will start practising the violin again.
  • The peace camp was offered new accommodation by the landlady of the Axe and Compass public house in Kempsford.
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