WOMAN vs CHAR: NOUN
- An adult female person (as opposed to a man)
- Women as a class
- A human female who does housework
- An adult female human.
- A human female employed to do housework
- A wife (sometimes a fiance or girlfriend)
- One who hates women; one who has an aversion to the female sex; a misogynist.
- A female attendant or servant.
- Women considered as a group; womankind.
- An adult female human belonging to a specified occupation, group, nationality, or other category. Often used in combination.
- A female servant or subordinate.
- A wife.
- A female lover or sweetheart.
- Formerly, the side of a British penny on which was the figure of Britannia, the other having the king's head: as “man or woman?”—that is, heads or tails?
- An adult female of the human race; figuratively, the female sex; human females collectively. See lady, 5.
- The qualities which characterize womanhood; tenderness; gentleness; also, when used of a man, effeminacy; weakness.
- A female attendant on a person of rank (used in such a connection as to show the special sense intended).
- A woman experienced in the ways of the world; a woman engrossed in society or fashionable life.
- An adult female person; a grown-up female person, as distinguished from a man or a child; sometimes, any female person.
- The female part of the human race; womankind.
- A female person who plays a significant role (wife or mistress or girlfriend) in the life of a particular man
- A human female who does housework
- A charred substance
- Any of several small-scaled trout
- A charlady, a woman employed to do housework; cleaning lady.
- An odd job, a chore or piece of housework.
- A turn of work; a labour or item of business.
- A time; a turn or occasion.
- Work done by the day; a single job, or task; a chore.
- One of the several species of fishes of the genus Salvelinus, allied to the spotted trout and salmon, inhabiting deep lakes in mountainous regions in Europe. In the United States, the brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis) is sometimes called a char.
- A fish of the family Salmonidæ and genus Salvelinus.
- In sugar manufacturing, concentrated sweet water or liquor highly charged with dissolved sugar.
- An old wine-measure. In Geneva it was about 145 United States gallons.
- An island or sandbank formed in a stream.
- Charcoal.
- A substance that has been scorched, burned, or reduced to charcoal.
- A charwoman.
- A car; a chariot.
- A character (text element such as a letter or symbol), whose data size is commonly one or several bytes.
- A turn.
- A particular time.
- A motion; an act.
- A particular thing to do; a single piece of work; a job; in the plural, miscellaneous jobs; work done by the day. See chore.
- Any of several salmonid fishes of the genus Salvelinus, usually having a dark body with light spots, and including the arctic char, the brook trout, and the lake trout.
WOMAN vs CHAR: VERB
- To man with female labor.
- To work, especially to do housework.
- To burn something to charcoal.
- To turn, especially away or aside.
- Burn slightly and superficially so as to affect color
- Burn to charcoal
- To burn slightly or superficially so as to affect colour.
WOMAN vs CHAR: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To work as a charwoman.
- To become reduced to carbon or charcoal.
- To become scorched.
- To reduce to carbon or charcoal by incomplete combustion. : burn.
- To work by the day, without being a regularly hired servant; to do small jobs.
- To burn the surface of; scorch.
WOMAN vs CHAR: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To act the part of a woman in; -- with indefinite it.
- To make effeminate or womanish.
- To furnish with, or unite to, a woman.
- To perform; to do; to finish.
- To work or hew, as stone.
- To reduce to coal or carbon by exposure to heat; to reduce to charcoal; to burn to a cinder.
- To burn slightly or partially.
WOMAN vs CHAR: OTHER WORD TYPES
- To call (a person) “woman” in an abusive way.
- To unite to, or accompany by, a woman.
- To cause to act like a woman; subdue to weakness like a woman.
- To act the part of a woman: with an indefinite it.
- (idiom) (to a woman) Without exception.
- (idiom) ((one's) own woman) Independent in judgment or action.
- To work in the house of another by the day; do chares or chores; do small jobs.
- To go; wend.
- To scorch; burn; ‘singe’ (liquids): as, to char the wort in brewing.
- To become charcoal.
- To turn; return.
- Ajar.
- To do; perform; execute.
- To separate (chaff) from the grain: in this sense only chare.
- To stop or turn back: in this sense only chare.
- To lead or drive.
- To turn; give another direction to.
- To burn the surface of more or less: as, to char the inside of a barrel (a process regularly employed for some purposes); the timbers were badly charred.
- To burn or reduce to charcoal.
- A human female employed to do housework
- In building, to hew; work, as stone.
- Any of several small trout-like fish of the genus Salvelinus
WOMAN vs CHAR: RELATED WORDS
- Victim, Daughter, Housewife, Person, She, Mother, Lady, Girl, Man, Cleaning woman, Cleaning lady, Char, Adult female, Charwoman, Womanhood
- Charr, Shar, Banc, Sandpiper, Overcook, Carbonize, Burn, Sear, Cleaning woman, Cleaning lady, Woman, Charwoman, Coal, Blacken, Scorch
WOMAN vs CHAR: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Female, Maid, Girlfriend, Victim, Daughter, Housewife, Person, She, Mother, Lady, Girl, Man, Char, Charwoman, Womanhood
- Redhorse, Bradley, Tar, Charr, Shar, Banc, Sandpiper, Overcook, Burn, Sear, Woman, Charwoman, Coal, Blacken, Scorch
WOMAN vs CHAR: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Man with man, or woman with woman, cannot fulfill this purpose of God in marriage.
- In the case of private knowledge, it must be man to man and woman to woman.
- It looks as if my mother will lose, but the woman that wants to take my little sister is not a good woman.
- In the Magnificat I hear Mary, as a woman, speaking a truth about God and sharing it with Elizabeth, another woman.
- One woman, one vote: rediscovering the woman suffrage movement.
- Each woman agreed that the most unattractive look for an Apostolic Pentecostal woman was no hairdo at all.
- WOMAN CHARGED WITH ANIMAL CRUELTY AFTER THROWING DOG OFF MOTEL BALCONY A woman who threaten.
- So there is nothing wrong with seeing woman after woman as being attractive.
- As a woman to woman, you are an absolutely fantastic, my dear.
- Russian Women bad russian woman dating Ukrainian Woman gorgeous Russian Woman a relationship Ukrainian Woman wild.
- Options: d char The character char is used as the field delimiter.
- Char had already started to date Kerry in private when Sam was developing a crush on Char.
- Catch a Char, prepare Salted Char and gird your loins for battle.
- Wait for device to send output char and flush any input char.
- Scalar Functions CHAR The CHAR function has a multiplicity of uses.
- Changes default character type from signed char to unsigned char.
- Char 1 calls out to Char 5: " __________________________________________________________.
- For Each c As Char In input If Char.
- The char (CORBA char) value, held by this CharHolder.
- Depending on the compiler settings, however, char is equivalent either to signed char or to unsigned char.
WOMAN vs CHAR: QUESTIONS
- Who is the woman in black in the movie The woman in black?
- Does the woman in black appear again in the woman in black?
- Who is the Weeping Woman in the painting The Weeping Woman?
- Which issue distinguishes the care of the pregnant woman from non-pregnant woman?
- Did Wonder Woman ever have a relationship with a woman?
- What makes a woman an honest woman in a relationship?
- How to get a woman back from a woman who ignores you?
- Who is the woman in the Pretty Woman scene with Julia Roberts?
- How often do woman's day and woman's World Subscriptions renew?
- What caused the woman of Woman Hollering Creek to holler?
- Why NLS_length_semantics is set to char in Informatica?
- Does set_terminate throw exceptions of type char *?
- How to assign a const char* value to a char* pointer?
- How to convert string to const char* or char* in C++?
- How to compare nth char of haystach with first char of needle?
- Can I cast an array of signed char to an unsigned char?
- Can I use static char * buffer = new char[n] and never delete?
- How to read content of file on console Char by Char?
- How is Char Char-em ISD using technology to recruit drivers?
- Is the argument of 'const char*' incompatible with 'char*' parameter?