How To Use Milkmaid In A Sentence
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Krishna raises Mount Govardhan on his little finger to save the milkmaids and cowherds from a terrible storm.
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He was obliged to declare on the playground the next day, that he would "thrash" any boy that said anything about milkmaids.
The Hoosier School-boy
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He noticed that milkmaids who had recovered from cowpox were resistant to contracting small pox.
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The removal of the bowls for settling the milk and the absence of butter churns or a cow barn indicate that it was not intended as a working dairy even for a royal milkmaid.
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In the seventeenth century, a milkmaid would send a stream of new, warm milk directly from a cow into a bowl of spiced cider or ale.
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Flowered silks frothed over crinoline skirts in a twisted take on the milkmaids immortalized by 18th century painter Fragonard.
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The efficient waiters, the good beer, the beautiful young woman in a milkmaid outfit at the hotel deskeven a 48-euro $68 conto and the freshening rain couldnt dull the shine of that simple lunch.
The Italian Summer
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Originally, stoolball was a game played by milkmaids, as early as the 14th century.
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Apparently "rynt ye", is what Cheshire milkmaids used to say to a cow, when they had finished milking it.
Combover and Bilge
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Unfolded is the tame story of Reginald, a fop, who wants only Patience, the village milkmaid.
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In the seventeenth century, a milkmaid would send a stream of new, warm milk directly from a cow into a bowl of spiced cider or ale.
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Yet on ballads, many decollete ladies, described as merchant's daughters, milkmaids, cook maids and shepherdesses, appear in the guise of royal queens and mistresses, dressed in expensive slays, gowns and stomachers.
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Elevator operators, typesetters, and airplane navigators have followed milkmaids and lamplighters into oblivion.
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Schools and shops closed: milkmaids and cowherds had taken a holiday.
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We see shoeblacks and lamplighters with their tools and utensils; and milkmaids, fruit sellers and prostitutes touting their wares.
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Schools and shops closed: milkmaids and cowherds had taken a holiday; the kisan and his helpmate took a temporary respite from their dawn-to-dusk programme of hard work in field and home.
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Eventually Joseph falls in love with Fanny, a milkmaid, becomes footman to Sir Thomas and Lady Booby, and, together with Mrs Slipslop the chambermaid, attends them for their season in London.
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One could ask if the ploughman and the milkmaid of today would understand much of what is prayed.
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They often grow in the grass along with the pink cuckoo flowers, known also as lady's smock or milkmaids.
Times, Sunday Times
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We found some, but not the great swathes that we had hoped for, although we were rewarded by plenty of patches of bluebells, drifts of wood anemones, a glade with masses of milkmaids and lots of primroses, cowslips and violas and bugle.
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Yet we have a variety of Krishna scenes—here he tackles a demon serpent, there he fights a demon crane, and in a grouping demarcated by darker walls he romances milkmaids, multiplying himself to dance with each individually.
From Stillness, Cosmic Action
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The air grew full of silence, the birds twittered sleepily, and from afar came, faint and clear, the musical song of the milkmaid calling the kine home to the milking.
The Adventures of Robin Hood
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Other common names for it are cuckooflower and milkmaids.
Times, Sunday Times
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We found some, but not the great swathes that we had hoped for, although we were rewarded by plenty of patches of bluebells, drifts of wood anemones, a glade with masses of milkmaids and lots of primroses, cowslips and violas and bugle.
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In fact, Goya was still painting pretty pictures of milkmaids and saucy profiles of his mistress.
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This frightened the milkmaid and the pastor.
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They often grow in the grass along with the pink cuckoo flowers, known also as lady's smock or milkmaids.
Times, Sunday Times
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They taught me about hepatitis, malaria, ringworm and how Edward Jenner discovered the cure to small pox while working with milkmaids.
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But, as Irwine would doubtless point out, sorrowfully but firmly, the security of England's institutions is more important than the fate of a light-headed milkmaid.
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His father was a carpenter, bricklayer, and farmer, and his mother was a milkmaid.
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In these damp rooms, the clang of milk churns had once competed with the cries of milkmaids locked in the arms of robust prayerful men.
SOMEWHERE EAST OF LIFE
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In these damp rooms, the clang of milk churns had once competed with the cries of milkmaids locked in the arms of robust prayerful men.
SOMEWHERE EAST OF LIFE
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We see shoeblacks and lamplighters with their tools and utensils; and milkmaids, fruit sellers and prostitutes touting their wares.
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She worked as a milkmaid on her husband Jack's milk round in Hanwell.
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In 1798, the British physician Edward Jenner used a milkmaid's lymph containing cowpox virus to vaccinate a child.
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The milkmaid milks the cows twice a day.