| 释义 | 
		Definition of frontierswoman in English: frontierswomannounPlural frontierswomenˈfrʌntɪəzˌwʊmənfrənˈtirzˌwo͝omən A woman living in the region of a frontier, especially that between settled and unsettled country.  a frontierswoman who can shoot, scuffle, and spin tall tales  Example sentencesExamples -  Set in 1885 New Mexico, the movie centers on Maggie, a frontierswoman and mother of two who also doubles as a ‘healer,’ helping locals who are suffering from toothaches and other simple maladies with homemade remedies.
 -  The goal is to portray the lives of real frontierswomen and challenge the legitimacy of the colorful but inauthentic typologies of them.
 -  She was a seven-foot-tall, 480-pound frontierswoman from the Utah Territory who could shoot and drink like a man and bend nails with her tongue.
 -  An emaciated John Carradine plays a Dracula who travels West seeking to suck the blood of innocent frontierswomen.
 -  Calamity's an uncouth, sarsaparilla-swilling, gun-slinging frontierswoman who can shoot, scuffle, and spin tall tales as well as any man alive.
 -  As a college student, she learned that Hispanic women were early settlers and frontierswomen, landowners who could hold property separately from their husbands under Spanish-Mexican law, long before the society matrons on the East Coast had that right.
 -  Encountering the lost language of the frontiersmen and frontierswomen (for they were different) shines a bright light on a dark corner of the past.
 -  Violence is part of our history and culture, too, and frontierswomen who valued their property weren't simply its victims; they were often complicit.
 -  You can have your famous women of history: gun-slinging Western gals, frontierswomen, and female pilots.
 
    Definition of frontierswoman in US English: frontierswomannounfrənˈtirzˌwo͝omən A woman living in the region of a frontier, especially that between settled and unsettled country.  a frontierswoman who can shoot, scuffle, and spin tall tales  Example sentencesExamples -  You can have your famous women of history: gun-slinging Western gals, frontierswomen, and female pilots.
 -  As a college student, she learned that Hispanic women were early settlers and frontierswomen, landowners who could hold property separately from their husbands under Spanish-Mexican law, long before the society matrons on the East Coast had that right.
 -  Encountering the lost language of the frontiersmen and frontierswomen (for they were different) shines a bright light on a dark corner of the past.
 -  The goal is to portray the lives of real frontierswomen and challenge the legitimacy of the colorful but inauthentic typologies of them.
 -  She was a seven-foot-tall, 480-pound frontierswoman from the Utah Territory who could shoot and drink like a man and bend nails with her tongue.
 -  Violence is part of our history and culture, too, and frontierswomen who valued their property weren't simply its victims; they were often complicit.
 -  An emaciated John Carradine plays a Dracula who travels West seeking to suck the blood of innocent frontierswomen.
 -  Set in 1885 New Mexico, the movie centers on Maggie, a frontierswoman and mother of two who also doubles as a ‘healer,’ helping locals who are suffering from toothaches and other simple maladies with homemade remedies.
 -  Calamity's an uncouth, sarsaparilla-swilling, gun-slinging frontierswoman who can shoot, scuffle, and spin tall tales as well as any man alive.
 
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