How To Use Womankind In A Sentence

  • She could not with a word revolutionize womankind, but she could at least be the herald to proclaim the dawn of the day during which the good seed was to be sown. Mary Wollstonecraft
  • Didn't he make any derogatory remarks whatsoever about womankind?
  • The world tends to look at such women today as anti-feminist anachronisms, naïve traitors to the cause of womankind, setting back the march of the liberated by their very existence.
  • The most effective move known to womankind involves stimulating three erogenous zones with one cunning hand trick.
  • Men, especially lovers, are addicted to the innocent fatuity of preferring to protect weakness rather than to admire courage in womankind. Indiana
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  • My faith in womankind has been seriously dented.
  • This appears to come as some relief to womankind.
  • And if you stayed with him to prevent his drawing that conclusion, what, you'd be taking a giant step on behalf of womankind?
  • For a man who cannot command his womankind is a fool. ' A HYPERBOREAN BREW
  • ` ` Ah, poor fellow! nothing can be more melancholy; unless, as young men sometimes do, you had fancied yourself in love with some trumpery specimen of womankind, which is indeed, as Shakspeare truly says, pressing to death, whipping, and hanging all at once. '' The Antiquary
  • The most effective move known to womankind involves stimulating three erogenous zones with one cunning hand trick.
  • At the age of 42, he has performed manfully in the wake of what was, judging by the length and depth of his emotional and very public suffering, apparently the most traumatic divorce in the history of man and womankind.
  • It's the best ten minute boost to female self-esteem ever invented, and I'd be the first to award Heat a gong honouring their services to womankind.
  • To excuse Carr on the grounds of female weakness is to infantilise her and, by implication, womankind
  • The ability to only write a newspaper column and still afford, in addition to other living expenses, every kind of designer shoe known to womankind?
  • Thinking of it like that, a man might well end up resentful of womankind. COMPULSION
  • His modesty at the mention of womankind is notable. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • Since the beginning of time stupidity has been one of mankind's (and womankind's) greatest weaknesses.
  • The world tends to look at such women today as anti-feminist anachronisms, naïve traitors to the cause of womankind, setting back the march of the liberated by their very existence.
  • He was a tall handsome young man, slightly built, with the kind of sallow complexion that women admire, and I wondered at his preferring my company to that of the womankind on board, who were certainly very civil to him. The Danvers Jewels, and Sir Charles Danvers
  • We, the men in the audience, sympathised from somewhere deep in our gut as these brave youths were swept away in the sea of Ulster's dancing womankind.
  • However, it was, at the very least, a small step for womankind because, unlike the ancient Roman, the husband now had a legal obligation to protect his wife.
  • I had, after all, accounted for two male children and thus done womankind something of a statistical favour.
  • I feel that it is not necessary for me to go further to convince any one of my readers that the lustfulness of the priestcraft is a menace to the chastity of womankind, for if this nun has told the truth, and which I know from past experiences is true, and which I also know is a recital that could be intensified ten thousand times over, if the whole truth could be told, but which cannot be told in this volume, as I have too much respect for my readers to recite what I have seen with my own eyes and what I have had repeated to me by broken-hearted "sisters" who have come to me with tears in their eyes and with sighs in their throats to tell me of their miseries. Thirty Years In Hell Or, From Darkness to Light
  • So the next day, after his sermon, the Pope concluded by saying, ‘Tuti homini, et tuti femini’ - Blessed be mankind and womankind.
  • Zephyrus, a mysterious, icy seductress, uses her power over men to snare them into aiding her scheme to overthrow the world order in order to avenge the wrongs done to womankind over the course of history. Straight for the Art: ‘Swallowing the Earth’ | Robot 6 @ Comic Book Resources – Covering Comic Book News and Entertainment
  • Just as the first coming had an optimistic message for mankind at a moment of social turmoil, this coming is being presented as something with a similar message for womankind.
  • And I promise you that, at this moment, if there be pillows sleepless yonder in the camp for the sake of the costly fragile toys called womankind, those jackasses of lovelorn lads have cause to regret the sojourn of Queen Margaret in Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine — Volume 56, No. 345, July, 1844
  • I am a man who can now have no joy in womankind, but when as a brother I protect them. The Scottish Chiefs
  • Well, Ashley, it may be no big deal to you, but we say you've scored big for womankind.
  • Thought his pain and shame would be lesser, If on womankind he might his anger wreak, THE CALLIGRAPHER
  • It is becoming increasingly difficult to ignore one's fear that there is an ulterior motive to how the whims of womankind are being reflected back at ourselves.
  • A bouquet or two of the choicest blossoms fell on the unperturbed head of one Mr. Graves, a stony young assistant he usually carried about with him; with a second nosegay he gifted another young gentleman in his train - an interesting fac - simile of himself, being, indeed, his own son; but the full corbeille of blushing bloom fell to the lot of meddling womankind, en masse. Shirley, by Charlotte Bronte
  • Is that made better by you snarling at the rest of womankind?
  • This is a small step for the Welsh cabinet but it's a giant leap for Welsh womankind.
  • In our society, the worst specimen of womankind is the so-called liberated female.
  • Ah, poor fellow! nothing can be more melancholy; unless, as young men sometimes do, you had fancied yourself in love with some trumpery specimen of womankind, which is indeed, as Shakspeare truly says, pressing to death, whipping, and hanging all at once. The Antiquary — Complete
  • It especially rules women, as indicated by the glyph, which is the universal symbol for womankind.
  • That advert is disgusting, degrading to womankind and downright dangerous.
  • He had not only lost his love, but what is more precious than love – faith in womankind. John Halifax, Gentleman

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