chambers_search-1

Search Chambers

Consult Chambers 21st Century Dictionary, The Chambers Thesaurus (1996) or Chambers Biographical Dictionary (1997 edition with amendments). Enter your search and choose your title from the drop-down menu.

Search results for 'maiden':

maiden noun 1 literary & old use a young, unmarried woman. 2 literary & old use a virgin. 3 horse-racing a horse that has never won a race. 4 cricket a maiden over. adj 1 first ever • maiden voyagemaiden speech. 2 unmarried • maiden aunt. 3 relating to a virgin or a young woman. 4 literary unused; fresh; referring to something that has never been captured, climbed, trodden, penetrated, pruned, etc • maiden castlemaiden soil. 5 said of a horse race: open to maidens only. maidenish adj. maidenlike adj. maidenly adj suiting, or suitable for, a maiden; gentle or modest.
ETYMOLOGY: Anglo-Saxon mægden.

maiden noun 1 literary & old use a young, unmarried woman. 2 literary & old use a virgin. 3 horse-racing a horse that has never won a race. 4 cricket a maiden over. adj 1 first ever • maiden voyagemaiden speech. 2 unmarried • maiden aunt. 3 relating to a virgin or a young woman. 4 literary unused; fresh; referring to something that has never been captured, climbed, trodden, penetrated, pruned, etc • maiden castlemaiden soil. 5 said of a horse race: open to maidens only. maidenish adj. maidenlike adj. maidenly adj suiting, or suitable for, a maiden; gentle or modest.
ETYMOLOGY: Anglo-Saxon mægden.

maiden noun 1 literary & old use a young, unmarried woman. 2 literary & old use a virgin. 3 horse-racing a horse that has never won a race. 4 cricket a maiden over. adj 1 first ever • maiden voyagemaiden speech. 2 unmarried • maiden aunt. 3 relating to a virgin or a young woman. 4 literary unused; fresh; referring to something that has never been captured, climbed, trodden, penetrated, pruned, etc • maiden castlemaiden soil. 5 said of a horse race: open to maidens only. maidenish adj. maidenlike adj. maidenly adj suiting, or suitable for, a maiden; gentle or modest.
ETYMOLOGY: Anglo-Saxon mægden.