英:[ˈkɪnzwʊmən]
美:[ˈkɪnzwʊmən]
英:[ˈkɪnzwʊmən]
美:[ˈkɪnzwʊmən]
kins·wom·an
kInz wU mihn
复数:kinswomen
noun
a female relative, esp. by birth.
a woman of the same race or cultural background as another person.
The first known use of kinswoman was in the 14th century
kissernoun
one that kisses
mouth entry 1 sense 1
face entry 1 sense 1
kiss1 of 2verb
to touch with the lips as a mark of love or greeting
to touch gently or lightly
wind gently kissing the trees
kiss2 of 2noun
a loving touch with the lips
a gentle touch or contact
a small cookie made of meringue
a bite-size candy
a chocolate kiss
kiss1 of 2verb
to touch with the lips as a mark of love or greeting
to touch gently or lightly
wind gently kissing the trees
kiss2 of 2noun
a loving touch with the lips
a gentle touch or contact
a small cookie made of meringue
a bite-size candy
a chocolate kiss
kiss1 of 2verb
to touch with the lips as a mark of love or greeting
to touch gently or lightly
wind gently kissing the trees
kiss2 of 2noun
a loving touch with the lips
a gentle touch or contact
a small cookie made of meringue
a bite-size candy
a chocolate kiss
kirknoun
church sense 1
kipper1 of 2noun
a kippered herring or salmon
kipper2 of 2verb
to cure by splitting, cleaning, salting, and smoking
kiosknoun
a small light structure with one or more open sides used especially to sell merchandise or services
a small structure that provides information and services on a computer screen
kinswomannoun
a woman who is a relative usually by birth
1 And this young lady, my distant kinswoman, Anne Brandon, must pass as Mistress Anne.
2 Kinsman: I will buy the land from our kinswoman, Naomi.
3 Moreover, Moses had married a woman of Midian, and might have been supposed to have some regard for her kinswomen.
4 Get your kinswoman, Miss Warren, out of this town.
5 Our kinswoman, the señora Rocha, mother of Sebastien, has been ailing for a great while, and now goes to Europe for special doctoring.
6 This chieftain's wife was not only known to Ozema, but she was a kinswoman.
7 After a moment he looked up, saying, "Do you know that this morning the banns were published for the wedding of Lord Dunmore and your kinswoman, Miss Warren?"
8 I would gladly have been profoundly moved, for he came nearer and nearer to the last hours of my deceased kinswoman--but I could not withdraw my ears from the foundry-work of the knife-handle.
9 Early the next morning her sister and her niece, who lived several miles from town, appeared at the gate of the institution to make inquiries about their kinswoman.
10 "Truly the Doctor hath greatly slighted his fame," said the Lady Maria apart to her kinswoman.
11 Whether Penn styled the city he founded after the Church mentioned in the Apocalypse, or after a friend or kinswoman, or because, interpreted, it was a Quaker sentiment, I cannot say.
12 He was married in Boston, 1759, to Rebecca Gallup, whom Isaac Royall refers to in his will as a kinswoman of his wife.
13 They selected their daughters or other close kinswomen for successors; this also applies to the Bears.
14 Ajima meant something like “Auntie”; it was a term of great affection, reserved only for older kinswomen.
15 Claude told her, was coldly thanked, and went home to writhe all that Tuesday night under the mortification of his kinswoman's snub.
16 "But I thought—" began his kinswoman, and got no farther.
17 Evidently she thought I but framed elaborate apologies for a kinswoman.
18 The older woman kneels in front of Mary, who looks down tenderly and embraces her kinswoman, who is bearing St. John the Baptist.
19 "Whatever you may say, I will not cease to be your good kinswoman and well-wisher," and with these words she quitted the room.
20 One would probably set him down as a rude bush chopper, and the other, whose good opinion he would have valued under different circumstances, was a kinswoman of his adversary.