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单词 housewife
释义

Definition of housewife in English:

housewife

nounPlural housewives ˈhaʊswʌɪfˈhaʊsˌwaɪf
  • 1A married woman whose main occupation is caring for her family, managing household affairs, and doing housework.

    the traditional division of labour between the husband as breadwinner and wife as housewife
    I am not just a housewife, I am an accountant, nurse, negotiator, cook, driver
    Example sentencesExamples
    • She is now a housewife and full-time mum to her children.
    • Born in 1946, the son of an electrician, his mother a housewife, Boyle was raised in a family that placed great store by a moral code.
    • A provincial housewife and a married doctor meet at a railway station and subsequently fall in love.
    • Scottish researchers have proved what housewives always knew: the more housework women do, the more depressed they become.
    • You can't talk about him without mentioning Shirley Valentine, the film that prompted a generation of housewives to book holidays on Mykonos.
    • Long ago strict Lenten rules prohibited the eating of all dairy products so housewives made pancakes to use up their supply of milk, eggs, and butter.
    • His father worked on building sites, his mother was a housewife.
    • In Germany, as a housewife and mother of two young children, she began to write.
    • My Mum was a typical housewife, loved housework and didn't feel I should really do anything round the house.
    • I am a housewife raising a family, paying a mortgage and doing the usual things that people do.
    • Only a year ago, she was a mother of six, farmer's wife and a housewife.
    • From advice to housewives on the importance of preserving kitchen waste to the announcement of an ice cream ban in 1942, the book gives a taste of the thrifty war years.
    • Set at the beginning of the Second World War, the one-off drama follows six turbulent years in the life of a real Lancashire housewife.
    • In case you've not seen it yet the story focuses on a group of middle class middle American housewives and their marriages, affairs, divorces and neuroses.
  • 2A small case for needles, thread, and other small sewing items.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • A typical sewing kit or "housewife" contained needles, thread, buttons, scissors, etc. for that purpose.
    • My partner also has his "housewife" from National Service in the RAF in the 1950s, mostly spent in Egypt.

Derivatives

  • housewifely

  • adjective ˈhaʊswʌɪfliˈhaʊsˌwaɪfli
    • In any case, I responded to the need for money in a typically housewifely way, that is, by economizing.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • It used to be the stuff of housewifely fantasies - now it's something young professionals can take for granted.
      • In previous eras girls usually followed a distinctive curriculum, such as the polite accomplishments or the housewifely curriculum or cultural studies or domestic science courses.
      • She recalls her mother's initial disappointment when she abandoned architecture to take up cooking - a career that had a housewifely ring to it.
      • Then there are the usual housewifely chores - planning the menu, getting odd jobs done around the house.
  • housewifery

  • noun ˈhaʊswɪfəriˈhaʊsˌwaɪf(ə)ri
    • The latter proclaims that it educates future leaders in a noble tradition when in fact it ushers future leaders' wives into the art of housewifery.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • She ate and drank the same things on a weekly cycle, observing the economies and the details of good housewifery.
      • They have no education, no taste for reading, no housewifery, nor indeed any earthly occupation, but that of dressing their hair, and adorning their bodies.
      • She turned her attention to the domestic work of housewifery, besides continuing her literary efforts at revising her writings.
      • People, mostly women, felt suddenly obliged to ignite their creativity with their housewifery.

Origin

Middle English husewif (see house, wife).

 
 

Definition of housewife in US English:

housewife

nounˈhaʊsˌwaɪfˈhousˌwīf
  • 1A married woman whose main occupation is caring for her family, managing household affairs, and doing housework.

    the traditional division of labor between the husband as breadwinner and wife as housewife
    I am not just a housewife, I am an accountant, nurse, negotiator, cook, driver
    Example sentencesExamples
    • A provincial housewife and a married doctor meet at a railway station and subsequently fall in love.
    • In Germany, as a housewife and mother of two young children, she began to write.
    • Only a year ago, she was a mother of six, farmer's wife and a housewife.
    • Set at the beginning of the Second World War, the one-off drama follows six turbulent years in the life of a real Lancashire housewife.
    • Scottish researchers have proved what housewives always knew: the more housework women do, the more depressed they become.
    • His father worked on building sites, his mother was a housewife.
    • My Mum was a typical housewife, loved housework and didn't feel I should really do anything round the house.
    • In case you've not seen it yet the story focuses on a group of middle class middle American housewives and their marriages, affairs, divorces and neuroses.
    • Born in 1946, the son of an electrician, his mother a housewife, Boyle was raised in a family that placed great store by a moral code.
    • Long ago strict Lenten rules prohibited the eating of all dairy products so housewives made pancakes to use up their supply of milk, eggs, and butter.
    • I am a housewife raising a family, paying a mortgage and doing the usual things that people do.
    • You can't talk about him without mentioning Shirley Valentine, the film that prompted a generation of housewives to book holidays on Mykonos.
    • She is now a housewife and full-time mum to her children.
    • From advice to housewives on the importance of preserving kitchen waste to the announcement of an ice cream ban in 1942, the book gives a taste of the thrifty war years.
  • 2A small case for needles, thread, and other small sewing items.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • A typical sewing kit or "housewife" contained needles, thread, buttons, scissors, etc. for that purpose.
    • My partner also has his "housewife" from National Service in the RAF in the 1950s, mostly spent in Egypt.

Origin

Middle English husewif (see house, wife).

 
 
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更新时间:2025/3/1 1:21:45