housewives

listen to the pronunciation of housewives
English - Turkish
ev hanımları

Bir yarı zamanlı iş ev hanımları için uygundur. - A part-time job is suitable for housewives.

Annem, şimdiki ev hanımlarının kullandığı ev gereçlerinin hiçbirine sahip değildi. - My mother had none of the mod cons which are available to today's housewives.

housewifes
housewife
{i} ev hanımı

George? dedi ev hanımı. George kim? - George? said the housewife. Who's George?

Endişeli ev hanımı telefonun zilini duydu ve hemen ahizeyi kaldırdı. - The worried housewife heard the telephone ring and quickly picked up the receiver.

housewife
{i} ev kadını

Facebook sayesinde, sinsice izlemek artık birkaç özverili hayranın kalesi değildir ama yoğun ev kadını için bile oldukça uygun bir yüksek otomasyonlu görevdir. - Thanks to Facebook, stalking is no longer the bastion of a few devoted enthusiasts, but a highly automated task convenient enough even for the busy housewife.

Bir ev kadını tutumlu olmalıdır. - A housewife should be economical.

housewife
{i} (h^z'îf), çoğ. house.wives (h^z'îfs) İng. dikiş kutusu
housewife
{i} dikiş kutusu
housewife
{i} çoğ. house.wives (haus'wayvz) ev hanımı
housewife
(Askeri) DİKİŞ KUTUSU: İçinde iğne, iplik, yüksük ve makas bulunan ve icabında sökük dikmek üzere, er üzerinde taşınan küçük kutu
housewife
ev hanım

Sadece bir ev hanımı olmaktan nefret ederim. - I would hate to become just a housewife.

George? dedi ev hanımı. George kim? - George? said the housewife. Who's George?

English - English
plural of housewife
housewife
The wife of a householder; the mistress of a family; the female head of a household
housewife
A little case or bag for materials used in sewing, and for other articles of female work; – called also hussy

Woffington's housewife, made by herself, homely to the eye, but holds everything in the world.

housewife
{n} a good mistress of a house
housewife
A homemaker is a person whose prime occupation is to care for their family and/or home; the term is originally an Americanism, and while it has entered mainstream English, it is not in common usage outside the United States. Finding a term to describe the modern man or woman who has left the paid workforce to care for their family is problematic. The term homemaker is used in preference to either housewife or househusband because it is inclusive, defines the role in terms of activities, rather than relation to another, and is independent of marital status. The terms (informal) stay-at-home mom and stay-at-home dad are also used, particularly if the person views their central role as caring for children. The euphemistic term "domestic engineer" has gone out of favor, being seen by some as satirical, as if to give a sense of mock dignity to a role held in low esteem by the speaker or writer. Likewise, the term "housekeeper" has come to describe hired cleaning help, and is no longer used—other than in a derogatory way—to describe homemaking. None of these terms adequately convey the diversity of activities an individual homemaker might choose to pursue, such as volunteer work, small-scale farming, education, religious ministry, political involvement, homeschooling, etc
housewife
{i} homemaker, married woman who manages her home full time (as opposed to working full-time outside the home)
housewife
a wife who who manages a household while her husband earns the family income
housewife
To manage with skill and economy, as a housewife or other female manager; to economize
housewife
A housewife is a married woman who does not have a paid job, but instead looks after her home and children. housewives a married woman who works at home doing the cooking, cleaning etc, but does not have a job outside the house = homemaker house husband
housewife
A hussy
housewife
A little case or bag for materials used in sewing, and for other articles of female work; - called also hussy
housewife
A little case or bag for materials used in sewing, and for other articles of female work; called also hussy
housewives
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