governess
English
Etymology
From Middle English governesse, a contracted form of governeresse, from Old French governeresse (“female ruler or administrator”).
Noun
governess (plural governesses, masculine governor)
- A woman paid to educate children in their own home.
- 1917, Constance Garnett, An Upheaval, translation of original by Anton Chekhov:
- [Mashenka Pavletsky] returning from a walk to the house of the Kushkins, with whom she was living as a governess, found the household in a terrible turmoil.
- 1990 January 12, Bill Watterson, Calvin & Hobbes (comic):
- Boy, you are a crabby lady! Who are you? Calvin's cruel governess?
- September 8 2022, Stephen Bates, “Queen Elizabeth II obituary”, in The Guardian:
- it was then still just possible to have a relatively normal life at the family’s 25-bedroom mansion at 145 Piccadilly, from where the baby was taken for a two-hour constitutional in her pram to Hyde Park and back every day by her governess.
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- (rare) A female governor.
Synonyms
- governoress (rare)
Translations
woman paid to educate children in their own home
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female governor
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Verb
governess (third-person singular simple present governesses, present participle governessing, simple past and past participle governessed)
- To work as governess; to educate children in their own home.
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