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husband
[ huhz-buhnd ]
noun
- a married man, especially when considered in relation to his partner in marriage.
- British. a manager.
- Archaic. a prudent or frugal manager.
husband
/ ˈhʌzbənd /
noun
- a woman's partner in marriage
- archaic.
- a manager of an estate
- a frugal person
verb
- to manage or use (resources, finances, etc) thriftily
- archaic.
- tr to find a husband for
- (of a woman) to marry (a man)
- obsolete.tr to till (the soil)
Derived Forms
- ˈhusbandless, adjective
- ˈhusbander, noun
Other Words From
- husband·er noun
- husband·less adjective
- un·husband·ed adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of husband1
Example Sentences
Former WNBA player Maya Moore and her husband Jonathan Irons have that kind of story.
My husband and I are so in love with her and she’s so in love with us and we get to keep her every weekend.
Saajan is mistakenly delivered a hot lunch intended for the ungrateful husband of an unhappy housewife, a man who doesn’t appreciate the care that’s gone into her cooking.
Luckily, I had my husband to remind me that I had taken quite the fixed mindset and I needed to work for it.
She went home told her husband, “Okay, we can’t move to Denver.”
Toomey lives here with her husband, Mark, a managing director at Goldman Sachs, and their two daughters.
Smith attended both funerals as a cop and as the husband of Police Officer Moira Smith, who died on 9/11.
As the protagonist gets herself off in front of her impotent husband, she moans “Oh, Gronky.”
Early on, the sexual protagonist complains that her Molson-drinking husband is pretty much an incompetent Neanderthal.
“Call me when the plane leaves the ground,” she said, in a tone that implied she knew her husband well.
M'Bongo, the great chief of this neighbourhood, paid a ceremonial visit to my husband.
My husband detests them; on the contrary, I like those carriages, for they tell me of happy—I mean to say, of former times.
A friend and companion meeting together in season, but above them both is a wife with her husband.
Not one woman in a thousand he knew would place a father before a husband; but his wife was different.
In the spring of 1877 Mrs. Kipling came to England to see her children, and was followed the next year by her husband.
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