Definition of Seawomen

1. seawoman [n] - See also: seawoman

Lexicographical Neighbors of Seawomen

seaware
seawares
seawaters
seaway
seaways
seaweed
seaweedlike
seaweeds
seaweedy
seawife
seawives
seawolf
seawolves
seawoman
seawomen (current term)
seaworm
seaworms
seaworthier
seaworthiest
seaworthiness
seaworthinesses
seaworthy
seaze
seazed
seazes
seazing
seb-
sebacate
sebacates

Literary usage of Seawomen

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. The Women of Turkey and Their Folk-lore by Lucy Mary Jane Garnett, John S. Stuart-Glennie (1890)
"... of Herodotus,2 which again was de- 1 SeaWomen of Turkey: Semitic and Moslem Women, ch. i., anil Conclusion. ..."

2. Glimpses of Unfamiliar Japan by Lafcadio Hearn (1894)
"Moreover, I learn that all the seamen and seawomen of this const do the same thing when passing through perilous places, ..."

3. The Stoddard Library: A Thousand Hours of Entertainment with the World's by John Lawson Stoddard (1910)
"... the seamen and seawomen of this coast do the same thing when passing through perilous places, or places believed to be haunted by the Ma. ..."

4. Glimpses of Unfamiliar Japan by Lafcadio Hearn (1894)
"Moreover, I learn that all the seamen and seawomen of this coast do the same thing when passing through perilous places, or places believed to be haunted by ..."

5. Through East Anglia in a Motor Car by James Edmund Vincent (1907)
"A staunch motor- yacht will stand a lot of weather without suffering much herself, but for her passengers, no matter how hardy seamen or seawomen they may ..."

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