| 释义 |
[ ley-dee-kin ] / ˈleɪ di kɪn /
noun(often used as a term of endearment) a little lady. Origin of ladykinFirst recorded in 1850–55; lady + -kin Words nearby ladykinladyfinger, ladyfish, ladyfy, lady-in-waiting, lady-killer, ladykin, ladylike, ladylove, Lady Luck, Lady Macbeth strategy, lady mayoress Dictionary.com UnabridgedBased on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2020 Example sentences from the Web for ladykinThe surprise and the sorry feeling in Ladykin's forehead crowded together to make room for something that was just womanliness. The Sick-a-Bed Lady|Eleanor Hallowell Abbott Ladykin chose green and blue and pink and red and yellow, also purple. The Sick-a-Bed Lady|Eleanor Hallowell Abbott It had not even slept with me; I had missed it in my room,—that baby of mine, that doll, that ladykin! Charles Auchester, Volume 1 of 2|Elizabeth Sheppard Before your vehemence Ladykin winced back against the rock and eyed you fearsomely. The Sick-a-Bed Lady|Eleanor Hallowell Abbott
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