lioness

[ UK /lˈa‍ɪ‍ənɛs/ ]
NOUN
  1. a female lion
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How To Use lioness In A Sentence

  • A lone cheetah, a lone tiger and an African lion and a couple of lionesses are no more exciting than small herds of kangaroo, deer, giraffe or Barbary sheep.
  • Now a lioness is as good at stealth as she is at killing, but of course there would still be those bullets to contend with. A Principle
  • The Tirupati zoo has six panthers, four lionesses, three tigers and also two white tigers for public viewing.
  • I'm like the mother lioness, showing my cubs what life is like and how to deal with it. Times, Sunday Times
  • The lioness has been put on medication to increases its blood circulation and will also be made to undergo a one-hour exercise regime every day.
  • Now, boys, keep your eyes open, there must be plenty of lionesses about;" and thus warned, the whole load, including the cornopean player, were on the look-out for lady visitors, profanely called lionesses, all the way up the street. Tom Brown at Oxford
  • We pulled up within 10-feet of three lionesses and their cubs most blissfully napping.
  • There was a pride of four lions - a lioness and her near-adult cubs - resting and ready to hunt when night fell.
  • A liger is a tigress and lion union and tiglons, on the other hand are the products of tigers and lionesses.
  • Fair sir, said the damosel, abate not your cheer for all this sight, for ye must courage yourself, or else ye be all shent, for all these knights came hither to this siege to rescue my sister Dame Lionesse, and when the Red Knight of the Red Launds had overcome them, he put them to this shameful death without mercy and pity. Le Morte Darthur: Sir Thomas Malory's Book of King Arthur and of his Noble Knights of the Round Table, Volume 1
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