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grande dame
[ gran dam, deym; French grahnd dam ]
noun
- a usually elderly woman of dignified or aristocratic bearing.
- a woman who is the doyenne of a specific field:
a grande dame of the American theater.
grande dame
/ ɡrɑ̃d dam /
noun
- a woman regarded as the most experienced, prominent, or venerable member of her profession, etc
the grande dame of fashion
Word History and Origins
Origin of grande dame1
Example Sentences
Lange’s Lillian Hall is a theater grande dame playing the charismatic matriarch in a Broadway revival of Chekhov’s “The Cherry Orchard.”
In the summer of 1974, I was working as a waiter at the White Elephant, the grande dame of Nantucket hotels, a rambling gray-shingled pile that sits right on the island’s harbor.
The first pick here comes from a grande dame of Australian letters, although she would probably balk at the term.
Mrs. Bohm created a vast body of photographs, in the process becoming a grande dame of the art form, before she died at 98 on March 15 at a care facility in Northwest London.
Often described as the “grande dame of Southern cooking,” Lewis was an accomplished chef and cookbook author who helped increase America’s understanding of the breadth and elegance of Southern cuisine.
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