[
UK
/nˈəʊbəlwˌʊmən/
]
[ US /ˈnoʊbəɫˌwʊmən/ ]
[ US /ˈnoʊbəɫˌwʊmən/ ]
NOUN
- a woman of the peerage in Britain
How To Use noblewoman In A Sentence
- The owner, Isisnofret, was identified as a "noblewoman," a rare title in the New Kingdom, Yoshimura added. Undefined
- Even a riggish French noblewoman could hardly throw a glamour of romance over so prosaic an interest as the Franco-American trade in fish-oil and salt cod.
- In 1634 a Portuguese noblewoman, presumably deranged by devotion, bit off the little toe of St Francis's right foot.
- After stepping into a cheap-looking time machine that seems to be made out of bathroom mirrors, they end up in the medieval days of yore and run around a lot trying to rescue him and save a noblewoman.
- The Dialogues concern a young noblewoman, Blanche de la Force, an hysteric afraid of just about everything.
- The king then marries Marina, a Polish noblewoman who disguises her lust for power as passionate love.
- Noblewoman only knowing beer and skittles and killing time will be at a respectful distance.
- The book belonged variously to an English lady, a Scottish noblewoman and thereafter to members of the Stewart family and two notable antiquarians.
- Widely considered one of the composer's most beautiful operas, The Abduction from the Seraglio tells the story of a noblewoman, Konstanze, who is kidnapped and taken to the Orient.
- Whether the male aristocrat's mistress was a noblewoman or a performer, the affair certainly remained a display of patriarchal power.