womanish การใช้
- And, yes, this one's very womanish.
- He is described as being womanly or " man-womanish ".
- That it is even possible to smuggle in female hormones to grow womanish breasts, as the newscasts speculated that Speck may have done?
- "It's really not totally suitable for the editorial page because it's often frivolous and womanish, " she told Ms . Ephron.
- He and Cordelia sit on the bed, and after apologizing for acting so " womanish ", Cordelia comforts him, and, feeling his muscles, begins to flirt with him.
- He was described as having a " small, womanish face " and that he's had the " same haircut ( shaggy with bangs ) " for most of his life.
- The reviewer in " The Critic " referred to the book as " a fine piece of work ", but also noted that it was " womanish and neurotic ".
- By the time of this meeting, Blyuvshtein perhaps in her mid-40s was a " small, skinny, already graying woman with a crumpled, old-womanish face, " Chekhov wrote.
- Gay African American filmmaker Marlon Riggs sharply criticized the sketches, saying that they perpetuated " a notion that black gay men are sissies, ineffectual, ineffective, womanish in a way that signifies inferiority ".
- This is how women are compared to men, as the Philosopher says ( Ethic . vii, 7 ) : wherefore those who are passively sodomitical are said to be effeminate, being womanish themselves, as it were.
- It seems the origin before the 13th century is unknown, but there's a plausible case that it comes from Old English " b鎑ling "-' effeminate fellow, womanish man'- morphing into a derogatory adjective ( " b鎑del " ).
- In such circumstances it comes as no surprise to find the New York Times reporting this week on the rise of the " transgender " movement, embracing " transsexuals, cross-dressers . . . intersexed people . . . womanish men, mannish women ."
- The 8th result refers to a'soft " cheeked, effeminate, woman " hating man'is some sort Greek lexicon where effiminate is given as meaning something akin to'woman-like'and also'womanish, feminine'etc . The 9th result appears to be the same thing as the 7th result.
- In contrast to Thoreau s manly simplicity, nearly twenty years after Thoreau s death Scottish author Robert Louis Stevenson judged Thoreau s endorsement of living alone in natural simplicity, apart from modern society, to be a mark of effeminacy, calling it " womanish solicitude; for there is something unmanly, something almost dastardly " about the lifestyle.
- The name that scholars and organizers prefer for this nascent movement is " transgender, " an umbrella term for transsexuals, cross-dressers ( the word now preferred over transvestites ), intersexed people ( also known as hermaphrodites ), womanish men, mannish women and anyone whose sexual identity seems to cross the line of what, in 1990s America, is considered normal.
- Marinetti described that : " Male children must, according to us, be training far differently from female children, because their early games are clearly masculine ones that is without affective morbidity, womanish sensibility but lively, bellicose, muscular and violently dynamic . which concludes that for a small population of children in an Italian elementary school, bullying is a method with which males exert their masculine prowess over another.
- Additional such codifying associations were patterned according to particular sexual deviances, in such that these particular sexual minorities were perceived as either biologically or mentally faulted in a way that associated them with those social groups or social categories that their particular sexuality was regarded as naturally belonging to; for instance, gay males were regarded as effeminate, i . e . womanish, as women were regarded as the only category of people that could legitimately feel sexual desire towards men.
- One extra berth was booked under a fictitious name Harris so that no one but the conspirators and the victim would be on board the coach, and this fictitious person would subsequently disappear and become the primary suspect in Cassetti's murder, a man who was'dark'and had a'womanish'voice . ( The only people not involved in the plot would be Bouc, for whom the cabin next to Cassetti had already been reserved, and Dr . Constantine ).
- As part of Greek politician's ( Aeschines') proof that a member of the prosecution against him, Timarchus, had prostituted himself to ( or been " kept " by ) another man while young, he attributed fellow prosecutor Demosthenes'nickname Batalos ( " arse " ) to his " unmanliness and " kinaidi " " and frequently commented on his " unmanly and womanish temper ", even criticising his clothing : " If anyone took those dainty little coats and soft shirts off you . . . and took them round for the jurors to handle, I think they'd be quite unable to say, if they hadn't been told in advance, whether they had hold of a man's clothing or a woman's ."