意味 |
scribessとは 意味・読み方・使い方
追加できません
(登録数上限)
Wiktionary英語版での「scribess」の意味 |
scribess
名詞
scribess (複数形 scribesses)
- (dated) A female scribe.
- 1885 August 27, The Central News, volume V, number 221, Perkasie, Pa., page [2], column 4:
- We now have among the Scribes and Scribesses of the News a “Katie” and a “Katie-Did.” We confess to a tenderness for the name of Katie. It reminds us of the happy days of the not very distant past when we were fond of quoting to a certain Katie who now shares the joys and sorrows of Nosco these lines: “O tell me where did Katy live, / And what did Katy do? And was she very fair and young, / And yet so wicked too? Did Katy love a naughty man, / Or kiss more cheeks than one? I warrant Katy did no more / Than many a Kate has done.”
- 1887 February 27, “Points from Plains. A Correspondent Lets Loose on Another of the Guild. Hot Shots from a Bold Critic. A Sorry Attempt to Belittle the Work Of a Pedagogue–People Tired of News - Dealer Twaddle–Emmet’s Birthday.”, in Sunday Morning Leader, volume 2, number 15, Wilkes-Barre, Pa., page 8, column 3:
- 1899 June 10, “The “Bulletin,” the “Freeman,” and Amy Castles”, in The Freeman’s Journal, volume L, number 3153, Sydney, N.S.W., section “The Evidence Against the “Bulletin.” Specimens Of “Pure Truth” and “Honest Record.””, subsection “Exhibit E.”, page 21, column 4:
- Miss Amy Castles, the Bendigo warbler, presented to Melb. audiences in loose hair and a rather short frock, was born at Capel-street, Melb., in July, 1880, says the register. This comes rather rough on the enthusiastic scribesses (including a Bulletin scribess) who put Miss Amy’s age down as 17, and gave her credit for looking two years younger, which she certainly doesn’t.
- 1902 April 15, O. C. Sigworth, “Correspondent Sigworth Dreams of a Banquet: That Was Not Held in Marble Halls, but It Was “a Beaut,” Just the Same, Until He Awoke—A Very Readable Conceit”, in Franklin Evening News, 25th year, number 7,406, Franklin, Pa., page 1, column 5:
- As Mr. [Marion] Brown is a young man of uncertain age and quite a lover of the beautiful in the ladies, and as our scribesses were out in all the pomp and heraldry befitting their rank, and each one wearing her Sunday smile, Marion was as happy as a little dog with a pink ribbon tied to the end of his tail.
- 1903, Tom Collins [pseudonym; Joseph Furphy], “Sat. Feb. 9. Runnymede. To Alf Jones’s.”, in Such Is Life: Being Certain Extracts from the Diary of Tom Collins, Sydney, N.S.W.: The Bulletin Newspaper Company, […], page 207:
- We might advantageously copy women-writers here. Woman, in the nature of things, must accumulate dirt, as we do; and she must now and then wash that dirt off, or it would be there still. (Like St. Paul, I speak as a man.) But the scribess never parades her ablutions on the printed page. If, for instance, you could prevail upon the whole galaxy of Australian authoresses and pen-women to attend a Northern Victoria Agricultural Show, in their literary capacity, you would see proof of this.
- 1915 August 17, “Editorial Crowd is ‘Finest Ever’”, in The Redondo Reflex, volume XI, number 52, Redondo Beach, Calif., page one, column 3:
- On the whole, it’s a jolly good thing the Pacific ocean is conveniently at hand to take care if the overflow of 160 scribes, scribesses and little scriblers in attendance at the twenty-seventh annual summer outing of the Southern California Editorial Association.
- 1923 May, the Tatler, “High Life in Hollywood: The Playhour of the Playfolks”, in Myron Zobel, editor, Screenland, volume VI, number 8, Chicago, Ill.: The Screenland Publishing Company, pages 75–76:
- The Tatler quotes from “Nerissa Nut’s” official account of the great event: “For years people have been asking favors of scribesses with never a thought of handing them a diamond tiara or a block of oil stock. It was a bright day, therefore, for those who wield the power of the press fluently with one finger when Mrs. George Melford descended from her castle on the hill to do missionary work among the great unmounted order of Amalgamated Copy Cats.
- 1933 November 29, “The Language Is Elegant But It’s “Scandal” Anyway”, in The Northerner, volume VII, number 14, Fort Wayne, Ind.: North Side High School, page three, column 2:
- 1935 November 14, […] Tattler, “Campus Merry-go-Round”, in California Daily Bruin, volume XV, number 44, [Los Angeles, Calif.]: The University of California at Los Angeles, page two, column 2:
- 1957 June 30, Karl Krug, “‘Pride and the Passion’: Kramer Film Masterpiece”, in Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph, [Pittsburgh, Pa.], section 4, page 6, column 2:
- 1978, Barbara S[witalski] Lesko, The Remarkable Women of Ancient Egypt, Berkeley, Calif.: B.C. Scribe Publications, →ISBN, page 17:
- The title “scribess” has been found on at least three documents of the Middle Kingdom, so although literacy was probably not widespread in ancient Egypt, some women did learn to read and write.
- 1996, David M Pierce, As She Rides By, New York, N.Y.: St. Martin’s Press, →ISBN, page 111:
- My other cause for anxiety was none other than S. Silvetti, scribess. When I’d phoned Evonne from home to fix a specific time and place for our rendezvous that evening, which was to be at her place after supper, she’d said, “OK, babe, we’ll be waitin’ on needles and pins.” “This ‘we,’ ” I said. “Is it like the royal ‘we’ or the editorial ‘we,’ we hope?”
1
scribesses
Wiktionary英語版
|
意味 |
scribessのページの著作権
英和・和英辞典
情報提供元は
参加元一覧
にて確認できます。
Text is available under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike (CC-BY-SA) and/or GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL). Weblio英和・和英辞典に掲載されている「Wiktionary英語版」の記事は、Wiktionaryのscribess (改訂履歴)の記事を複製、再配布したものにあたり、Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike (CC-BY-SA)もしくはGNU Free Documentation Licenseというライセンスの下で提供されています。 |
ピン留めアイコンをクリックすると単語とその意味を画面の右側に残しておくことができます。 |
ログイン |
Weblio会員(無料)になると 検索履歴を保存できる! 語彙力診断の実施回数増加! |
「scribess」のお隣キーワード |
weblioのその他のサービス
ログイン |
Weblio会員(無料)になると 検索履歴を保存できる! 語彙力診断の実施回数増加! |