English to Urdu Dictionary spinster

spinster

کںواری
definition
noun
He is a gigolo, a love 'em and leave 'em flimflam man who promises widows and spinsters marriage and devotion on the premise of a substantial upfront cash payment.
an unmarried woman, typically an older woman beyond the usual age for marriage.
example
A 'spinster' is more than a female bachelor: she is beyond the expected marrying age and therefore seen as rejected and undesirable.
Jane is the bright spot in her lonely 'spinster' 's life, and a letter from Jane is what she lives and waits for.
I want you to realize that are better choices than being a lonely 'spinster' .
Youths, who remained bachelors and 'spinsters' due to their economic backwardness, were identified and provided with the required cash and materials for settling down in life.
If blame is to be laid, it should be at the feet of a handful of aged and godly 'spinsters' and widows who taught me through my primary education.
Brian told the secretary, a comically 'spinsterish' woman with a bun and glasses, that they were there for Mr. Mallard.
He is a gigolo, a love 'em and leave 'em flimflam man who promises widows and 'spinsters' marriage and devotion on the premise of a substantial upfront cash payment.
Not that single men of today do not have the same taste as the bachelors or 'spinsters' of those days but it so happened that during that period the circumstances were unique.
The experience of these nineteenth-century 'spinsters' cannot be divorced from their language because it structured their experience, indeed, it made their experience possible.
Finally, the night was drawing to an end and I was dragged up the front along with all the other unmarried 'spinsters' - against my protests - to try and catch the bouquet.
Is this the sound of my impending 'spinsterhood' ?
Too stern, too bookish, or too 'spinsterish' - it was obvious that choosing glasses is tougher than finding a single man who's not weird.
Sheba is branded a harlot in the press and forced to quit her job and flee the family home, which she does with Barbara Covett, the school's 'spinsterish' history teacher.
Her omnipotent Jewish mother valiantly works to end her daughter's 'spinsterhood' , but to no avail.
Edith and her sister were trapped in 'spinsterish' lives, caring for their selfish, manipulative mother.
For example, until recently hardline bachelors and 'spinsters' were seen as odd and eccentric - while today they have become mainstream, even positive figures.
What is to be regretted, however, is the demise of all those conscientious 'spinsters' and widows who used to type authors' manuscripts.
Unmarried women over twenty were considered 'spinsters' , and bachelors in their late twenties were subjected to public censure and mockery.
Female sexuality is now in a better state than it was in Victorian England, when women were categorised into three types: virgin 'spinsters' , wives who only tolerated sex, or whores.
Both widows and 'spinsters' were prominent in property ownership and in financing businesses as sleeping partners.
Often they picked one child - usually a daughter - to stay home with the parents, caring for them well into her 'spinsterhood' .
Bachelors and 'spinsters' continued to be common and the age of marriage remained high.
Or perhaps, in a more generous mood, you'd have her turning 40 and sinking gracefully into the silent oblivion of confirmed 'spinsterhood' .
Lenore's a singing waitress who's been dumped by her long-term boyfriend; Heidi is a 'spinsterish' professor at Concordia, partnerless, but determined to get pregnant.
At one time this would have raised eyebrows - all those lonely 'spinsters' and neglected bachelors sitting at home, pining for a mate.
Texas's married women quickly relinquished power to their husbands after the Civil War, and 'spinsters' and widows in the Old Southeast maintained close economic and personal ties to kin.
Ann Street started life as an out-of-the-way address for well-to-do widows and 'spinsters' .
Single men and those with families, wives, widows and 'spinsters' could all be found in the movement.
The advice literature reiterated this view in the 1830s, '40s, and '50s, and the theme of true marriage and moral 'spinsters' persisted into the last decades of the century.
I swear to God… I am preparing for my 'spinsterhood' .
Credits: Google Translate
Download the
HelloEnglishApp
image_one