dowd
English
Etymology
Back-formation from dowdy.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /daʊd/
- Rhymes: -aʊd
Noun
dowd (plural dowds)
- (archaic) A dowdy person, especially a woman; a frump.
- 1913, Henry Sydnor Harrison, chapter XI, in V. V.'s Eyes:
- He, of course, was only an unbalanced religious fanatic, whose opinions were not of the slightest consequence to anybody, whom everybody seemed to take a dislike to at sight (except ignorant paupers like the Cooneys), and whose ideal type of girl would probably be some hideous dowd, a slum-worker, a Salvation Army lassie, perhaps.
- 1920, May Edginton, chapter XVI, in Married Life, or The True Romance:
- Marie was still away upon her trail. "I don't really let myself go as much as you might think. I'm always dressed for breakfast, if I've been up half the night; I don't allow myself to be slovenly. And however I've had to hurry over putting the children to bed, and cooking dinner and things, I always change my blouse and put on my best slippers before Osborn comes in. I feel—at home I feel as if I look quite nice; but when I come out of it"—she indicated her surroundings—"I realise I'm just a dowd who's fast losing what looks she had. When I come out, and see others, I—I know I can't compete. It makes you almost afraid to come out. And Osborn—while I'm at home, plodding along, you see, he's out, seeing the others all the time. He sees them in the restaurants, and they pass him in the street—girls as I used to be."
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:dowd.
- Any of various European moths of the genus Blastobasis.
Welsh
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /dou̯d/
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