madam

suomi-englanti sanakirja

madam englannista suomeksi

  1. rouva, hieno nainen

  2. bordellinpitäjä

  1. Substantiivi

  2. rouva

  3. Verbi

  4. rouvitella

madam englanniksi

  1. (non-gloss)

  2. (syn)

    (cot)

    (ux)

  3. (quote-book)|year=1857|page=276|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/whiteliesstory01readuoft/page/276/mode/1up|passage=“Nothing, madam, but a tumbler of wine with a little water—thank you, madam. Mesdames, great events have occurred since I left you.”

  4. (quote-journal)

  5. (quote-journal) This size, madam!” Certainly, the mesdames would not have been interested.

  6. (quote-book)

  7. The mistress of a household.

  8. A conceited or quarrelsome girl.

  9. A woman who runs a brothel, particularly one that specializes in finding prostitutes for rich and important clients.

  10. (RQ:Mezzrow Blues)

  11. A hated or contemptuous woman; (n-g)

  12. To address as "madam".

  13. (RQ:Dryden Evening's Love)

  14. (quote-book)|title=Luxury, Pride and Vanity, the Bane of the British Nation.(nb...)|edition=4th|location=London|publisher=(...) J(quote-gloss) Roberts (...) and sold by Edward Withers,(...) J(quote-gloss) Joliffe(nb...)|page=11|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/bim_eighteenth-century_luxury-pride-and-vanity_jones-erasmus_1736_2/page/n12/mode/1up|oclc=52299434|passage=In Houſes where great Numbers of theſe Wretches are lodg’d it is both merry and melancholy to hear what a ''Maiding'' and ''Madamming'' there is all Day long, from the top of the Houſe to the bottom.

  15. {{quote-text|en|year=1897|author=Richard Marsh|title=The Beetle

  16. {{quote-text|en|year=1905|author=William Clark Russell|title=The Yarn of Old Harbour Town|page=208

  17. {{quote-text|en|year=1988|author=Gahan Wilson|title=Eddy Deco's Last Caper|page=123

  18. (quote-book) Vivek handed over a sturdily packed 1 litre bottle of ''Dom Perignon'' champagne. (..) “Thank you and your Chairman for your kindness. We are overwhelmed. Could you please stop ''sirring'' and ''madamming'' us? We would be more comfortable with Naresh and Tam. But....(quote-gloss)

  19. To be a madam; to run (a brothel).

  20. (quote-book) Thompson; Algernon D. Thompson|title=The Kentucky Novel|location=Lexington, Ky.|publisher=Press of Kentucky|University of Kentucky Press|page=11|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=pngLAAAAMAAJ&q=madamed|passage=Margaret Long’s freudianized Louisville does not have the local color of the famous Lexington bordello madamed by the late Belle Breezing (in the process of being fictionized); (..)

  21. (quote-book) Madaming is the sort of thing that happens to you—like getting a battlefield commission or becoming the Dean of Women at Stanford University.

  22. (quote-journal) also used warm golden colors for the friendly whorehouse madamed by (w).

  23. (quote-journal), who clearly wants to murder all three of them just for the sport of it. All this results in a weird circular chase that doesn’t go anywhere, but takes them into and out of boxcars and onto and off a floating cathouse madammed by (w) in makeup two degrees this side of a clown.|footer=(small)

  24. (quote-book) As far as earning those slips of paper, you trade for them.” The woman dared shove lacy panties and the slutty Halloween costume right into Eugenia’s chest. “You trade the one commodity you got.” (..) “But… you’re still here.” / “By choice. I can walk out that door anytime I wish, take a walk by the lake. Visit City.” (..) The indomitable Joan ''madamed'' by choice. For air conditioning and comfort. “The ship is a haven, but we all must do our part.”

  25. (l), lady

  26. (l), female counterpart of a pimp

  27. madame, lady

  28. (alt form)

  29. (l)

  30. (syn of)

  31. an old woman (generally)

  32. (l) (gl)

  33. (l) (gl)

  34. madam