wench

suomi-englanti sanakirja

wench englannista suomeksi

  1. likka

  2. käyttää toistuvasti prostituoidun palveluja

  1. Substantiivi

  2. Verbi

wench englanniksi

  1. A girl or young woman, especially a buxom or lively one.

  2. (ux)

  3. (RQ:Sidney Arcadia)

  4. (RQ:Shakespeare All's Well)

  5. (RQ:King James Version) and (w) ſtayed by En-rogel: (for they might not be ſeene to come into the citie) and a wench went and told them: and they went, and tolde king (w).

  6. (RQ:Homer Chapman Iliads)

  7. (RQ:Swift Gulliver's Travels)

  8. (RQ:Black Sabina Zembra)

  9. (quote-song)

  10. (quote-book)|section=Comic 262 - Too Funny|sectionurl=https://rain.thecomicseries.com/comics/262|format=webcomic|text="Can't we use a real girl? Can't Maria just play along?" / "She's at the movies with Chanel." / "Lucky wench. Why can't Ryan just be with a guy? Aren't you offended?" / "Just doing what Rain said to do. And actually, a little, yeah."

  11. A girl or young woman of a class.

  12. (quote-book),(nb...)|year=1871|page=25|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=tEoPAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA25|oclc=557029821|passage=The woman is a brazen, hard-looking wench, a female pedlar, who hawks needles, thread, cheap looking-glasses, pious pictures, almanacs, hair-pins, ballads, of the most humble pattern, through the country.

  13. (non-gloss definition): darling, sweetheart.

  14. (RQ:Shakespeare Henry 8)

  15. (RQ:Browning Aurora Leigh)

  16. A woman servant; a maidservant.

  17. (RQ:Tyndale NT)

  18. (RQ:Scott Tales of My Landlord 3)."

  19. (quote-book) So I got onto one of the ponies and led the others down to the spring near camp to water them while the wench was a getting breakfast, and some o' the rest o' the outfit was a fixin the saddles and greasing the wagon.

  20. A promiscuous woman; a (l).

  21. (synonyms)

  22. (RQ:Marlowe Jew of Malta)

  23. (quote-book),(nb...)|year=1702|year_published=1709|page=103|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=Id4NAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA103|oclc=1103119849|passage=Whilſt Men have theſe Ambitious Fancies, / And wanton Wenches read Romances, / Our Sex will—What? out with it: Lye: / And Theirs in equal Strains reply.|footer=(small)

  24. (RQ:Spectator)

  25. A prostitute.

  26. A black woman (of any age), especially if in a condition of servitude.

  27. (quote-book), Department of Tourism & Culture|year=1776–1787|year_published=2000|isbn=978-0-88871-633-0|passage=Nancy Basset, 28, likely wench, mulatto / Proved to be free. / Certified free as per General Birch Certificate. / / Patience Jackson, 23, very likely wench, mulatto / Says she was born free Rhode Island. / Certified free as per General Birch Certificate.

  28. (RQ:Stowe Uncle Tom's Cabin)

  29. (quote-book) was fined ten dollars in the Freedman's Court yesterday, for being drunk and disorderly. Not having the money in her possession, she requested that a guard be sent with her to her residence to procure it. The Provost allowed a guard to wait on the wench, who, as soon as she found herself inside of her own door, locked it, and left the poor guard outside without the money. He returned to court without either the wench or fine.

  30. (quote-book) and the Representation of Black Femininity|title=Like a Natural Woman: Spectacular Female Performance in Classical Hollywood|location=New Brunswick, N.J.|publisher=Rutgers University Press|year=2014|pages=106–107|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=v86WBAAAQBAJ&pg=PA106|isbn=978-0-8135-6265-0|passage=So complete was this illusion, claims Lott|Eric Lott, that many audience members, including (w)'s mother, believed they were seeing authentic, biologically black performers on New York stages. Of course, wench characters seem to especially test the bounds of authentic performance. Played by men, wenches were nonetheless read by audiences as beautiful women: ... Extant photographs and engravings of wench performers do not always represent them as blacked up, (..) In antebellum minstrel shows, wench songs were most often sung ''about'' mulatto women rather than by them.

  31. To frequent prostitutes; to whore; also, to womanize.

  32. (quote-book)|location=London|publisher=Printed by Richard Hodgkinson for Laurence Blaikelocke(nb...)|year=1638|year_published=1640|oclc=1126534284|newversion=republished in|title2=Playes, Maskes, Epigrams, Elegies, and Epithalamiums.(nb...)|location2=London|publisher2=Printed by I. Dawson,(nb...)|year2=1639|section2=Act II, scene iv|sectionurl2=https://archive.org/details/playesmaskesepig00nabb/page/101/mode/1up|oclc2=316388290|passage=This is ſure ſome hide-bound ſtudent, that proportions his expence by his penſion; and wencheth at Tottenham court for ſtewed prunes and cheeſcakes.

  33. (quote-book)|location=London|publisher=Printed by Thomas Brudenell for John Partridge and Humphrey Blunden,(nb...)|year=1647|page=85|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=cExRAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA85|oclc=39806250|passage=He man under the influence of the planet Mars hath a marke or ſcar in his face, is broad-ſhouldered, a ſturdy ſtrong body, being bold and proud, given to mocke, ſcorne, quarrell, drinke, game and wench: which you may eaſily know by the Signe he is in; if in the houſe of ♀ he wencheth, if in ☿s he ſteals, ...

  34. (quote-book); L. Hawes, W. Clarke, and R. Collins,(nb...); and J. Harrison,(nb...)|year=1767|volume=II|issue=LXVI|page=|pageurl=|oclc=723144896|passage=In ſhort, Ned has drank, wenched, fought, and beggared himſelf, through an exalted ſolicitude for the general emolument, and is now cloſe pent up in one of our priſons, out of a pure and diſintereſted regard for the welfare of ſociety.

  35. (quote-journal)|month=March|year=1807|volume=IV|section=footnote|page=247|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=KM42AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA247|oclc=79264500|passage=I know a clergyman who, having enjoyed for several years the world's good opinion, was turned off, through a ridiculous pique, by a young nobleman to whom he was preceptor. (..) He drank, wenched, and was so complete a gambler, that, had he kept his old situation much longer, he would have ruined the principles of his pupil.

  36. (RQ:Scott Fortunes of Nigel)

  37. (quote-book)|year2=2008|page2=11|pageurl2=https://books.google.com/books?id=jBKhAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA11|isbn2=978-0-00-648279-6|passage=Bundy's reasons for leaving the Cape are obscure. He drinks, but that doesn't dim his powers. He wenches. But so do we all.

  38. (quote-book)

  39. a promiscuous woman; a (l).

  40. (RQ:Chaucer Canterbury Tales)