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    Synonyms and Definitions

    Use "womankind" in a sentence

    womankind example sentences

    womankind


    1. not lie with mankind, as with womankind: it is abomination


    2. “‘Thou shalt not lie with mankind, as with womankind, it is an abomination’ Leviticus 18:22,” Dad calls out after Grandma


    3. 22 you shall not lie with mankind, as with womankind: it is abomination


    4. 22 Thou shalt not lie with mankind, as with womankind: it is abomination


    5. He was all too aware of the wiles of womankind from his past relationships


    6. You’ve heard of mankind and humankind, but does womankind have something to do with Hugh Hefner?


    7. Here and Now is the mid-plane where mankind has thus far declared war upon the earth that gave him life, created an enemy of womankind, forsaken his own children, and threatened to leave them a legacy of despair and hopelessness


    8. the nicest – sorry, the most incredible arse that womankind has ever been


    9. incredible arse that womankind has ever been blessed with


    10. Tonight she would give herself to him as no woman had given herself to a man in the history of womankind

    11. It is long past time—but, hopefully, just in time—for womankind to reclaim all that was stolen from them, all that they had shared with love and sheer pleasure


    12. Not guilty! Womankind places the emphasis on the last syllable—KIND


    13. It’s not the ancient goddess-worship “religion” that we need to revive— but the collective memory of long-forgotten powers inherent in womankind (see poem, “Continuum”) that even the most primitive ones once knew how to use


    14. As a woman however, I’ll fight to the death any who dare grab the mantle of whatever god they worship and try to impose slavery upon my six daughters, my daughter-in-law, my ever-growing number of grand-daughters—or any of my sisters in womankind


    15. From what man has wrought in our world, isn't it an inescapable conclusion that womankind can't possibly be any greater an evil than that originator of war, rape, and suicidal destruction of one's own habitat, mankind?


    16. It’s not the ancient goddess-worship “religion” that we need to revive—but the collective memory of long-forgotten powers inherent in womankind (see poem, “Continuum”) that even the most primitive women once knew how to use—and some still do


    17. It’s not the ancient goddess-worship “religion” that we need to revive—but the collective memory of long-forgotten powers inherent in womankind (see poem, “Continuum”) that even the most primitive women once knew how to use—& some still do


    18. womankind in his work that I had not sensed in any of the poetics of Bob Dylan, a poet-singer of


    19. Gentlemen, which means boys, be courteous to the old maids, no matter how poor and plain and prim, for the only chivalry worth having is that which is the readiest to pay deference to the old, protect the feeble, and serve womankind, regardless of rank, age, or color


    20. common cause of womankind, out of whose mouths this practice tended

    21. as to the thing itself, the less said of it was the better; but that though she might be suspected of partiality, from its being the common cause of womankind, out of whose mouths this practice tended to take something more than bread, yet she protested against any mixture of passion, with a declaration extorted from her by pure regard to truth; which was, that whatever effect this infamous passion had in other ages and other countries, it seemed a peculiar blessing on our air and climate, that there was a plaguespot visibly imprinted on all that are tainted with it, in this nation at least, for that among numbers of that stamp whom she had known, or at least were universally under the scandalous suspicion of it, she would not name an exception hardly to one of them, whose character was not, in all other respects, the most worthless and despicable that could be; stript of all the manly virtues of their own sex, and filled up with only the worst vices and follies of ours; that, in fine, they were scarce less execrable than ridiculous in their monstrous inconsistence, of loathing and contemning women, and at the same time apeing all their manners, airs, lisps, scuttle, and, in general, all their little modes of affectation, which become them at least better, than they do these unsexed, male misses


    22. But the circumstance was sufficient to lead him to select Tess in preference to the other pretty milkmaids when he wished to contemplate contiguous womankind


    23. So he allowed his mind to be occupied with her, deeming his preoccupation to be no more than a philosopher's regard of an exceedingly novel, fresh, and interesting specimen of womankind


    24. "I wish half the women in England were as respectable as you," he said, in an ebullition of bitterness against womankind in general


    25. In short, it was plain that a vicar might be adored by his womankind as the king of men and preachers, and yet be held by them to stand in much need of their direction


    26. A painter seeking here below for a type of Mary's celestial purity, searching womankind for those proud modest eyes which Raphael divined, for those virgin lines, often due to chances of conception, which the modesty of Christian life alone can bestow or keep unchanged,— such a painter, in love with his ideal, would have found in the face of Eugenie the innate nobleness that is ignorant of itself; he would have seen beneath the calmness of that brow a world of love; he would have felt, in the shape of the eyes, in the fall of the eyelids, the presence of the nameless something that we call divine


    27. Was this not odd? Did not Mankind comprise Womankind as well? The Philosophers claim’d ’twas so, and yet e’en the most benevolent amongst ’em, the ones who would most vociferously argue the Universality of Christian Charity and Love, seem’d to disregard the Passions and Interests of one-half the Human Race


    28. “Like many another Sea-struck Lad, bound to a Home he hated, a Father he fretted o’er, a Mother to make him mutter under his Breath, I read Dampier’s New Voyage Round the World an’ dreamt o’ driftin’ from a Jamaican Plantation to Campeachy, o’er the Isthmus with Buccaneers, back to Virginia, ’round Cape Horn, across the Pacific to the Philippines, an’ thence to the East Indies, Land o’ incredible Riches, Jewels, an’ Spices, an’ strange slant-eyed brown-skinn’d Boys in Turbans an’ with bare Breasts (for e’en then, at the tender Age o’ Thirteen, I had forsworn all Womankind, havin’ been cruelly spurn’d by me first True Love in Oxfordshire! An’ lucky ’twas, too, fer a Boy bound to Sea fer seven Years!)


    29. But I have found in you another Quality more rare than e’en your Beauty or your Understanding, namely your Sweetness and Loyalty—Traits said not to exist in Womankind


    30. I tell you if you now dispose of me and slight all Womankind in your Articles, the Pow’rs that have brought about your Redemption shall once more abandon you, and you shall fall into the Hands of an e’en crueller Master than Captain Whitehead here!”

    31. “O ye best not say that to our Mistress Fanny,” Lancelot interrupted, “fer she is fierce in her Defence o’ Womankind


    32. At womankind he growled a curse,


    33. It belongs to Billy’s uncle, the dearest old bachelor—maybe that is the reason the boy has such reverence for womankind


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    "womankind" definitions

    women as distinguished from men