grass widower
English
    
    Etymology
    
From grass + widower, after grass widow.
Pronunciation
    
- Audio (AU) - (file) 
Noun
    
grass widower (plural grass widowers)
- A married man whose spouse is away. [from 19th c.]
-  1931, Dorothy L. Sayers, The Five Red Herrings:- "I wonder if there is a single person in the Stewartry that Campbell didn't have a row with," thought Wimsey, and made an addition to his list:—
 6. John Ferguson—about 36—about 5 foot 10 inches—grass widower.
 
-  1984, Anita Brookner, Hotel du Lac, Penguin, published 2016, page 57:- She was generous with her offers to introduce Edith to various grass-widowers of her acquaintance – ‘my cast-offs’, as she laughingly referred to them […] .
 
 
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Translations
    
a married man whose wife is away
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