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词汇 nursemaid
释义

Definition of nursemaid in English:

nursemaid

noun ˈnəːsmeɪdˈnərsˌmeɪd
dated
  • A woman or girl employed to look after a young child or children.

    (受雇照管儿童的女性)保姆

    Example sentencesExamples
    • My nursemaid Nysa used to say I was comely child, but I never thought so.
    • A young nursemaid came forward with two sleeping babies, one only a few months old, the other almost a year.
    • On each site young women - shopgirls, nursemaids, typists - operated the fire control equipment while men fired the guns.
    • The situations were the predictable ones, showing young boys (but sometimes men) seduced by women in a form of authority - governesses, nursemaids, nurses, schoolteachers, stepmothers.
    • Elsewhere at Great Taplows life is not what it might seem and young Lord Harry's nursemaid, the beautiful and clever Grace May, has painful choices to make about her future.
    • Moreover, a one income family used to have a sort of safety net in the form of Mom, who could drop housework to become a nursemaid, emergency aid worker, or temporary wage earner.
    • By the age of four or five, children become nursemaids.
    • Their offspring were raised by an aunt and a succession of nursemaids.
    • The care of children was normally the task of parents and the immediate family, but, amongst the wealthy, care was the responsibility of special servants, such as nursemaids or ‘nannies’.
    • There are a couple of them in the castle - Hugh MacDonald, who was incarcerated in the cellars with a platter of salt beef and an empty water jug, and the hapless nursemaid, who had the misfortune to drop the son and heir from an upstairs window.
    • Anne moved closer to Amelia, feeling like a little girl again as she nearly clutched her nursemaid's skirts.
    • It makes not Germany but France seem - in choral music as in Gluckian drama - the nursemaid of Classicism.
    • ‘I prefer to be a babysitter than a nursemaid,’ she has also reportedly said.
    • Leopold had a sister Dora who was four years older than he was, and the other member of the household was Aleathea Starling who not only was nursemaid to the two young children but also looked after the family home.
    • As generations of nursemaids have claimed, ginger ale, America's oldest soda, is an effective stomach soother.
    • An unidentified but obviously affluent family is depicted in a richly appointed interior, while in an adjacent room, through an open door, a nursemaid and two children can be seen.
    • Cared for by nursemaids and educated largely at home, they were isolated from their peers - a fact sometimes compounded by their parents' political zeal.
    • My grandmother was a nursemaid in high demand with the richest echelons of the London gentry.
    • Here, she's stuck in Westmount, hovering over a nasty, grumpy old husband, making her less of a life partner and more of a nursemaid.
    • Then she looked the young nursemaid straight in the eye.
    Synonyms
    nanny, governess, nursery nurse, nurserymaid, childminder, au pair, childcarer
    Indian ayah, amah
    Jewish metapelot
    informal nursey
    French dated bonne
verb ˈnəːsmeɪdˈnərsˌmeɪd
[with object]
  • Look after or be overprotective towards.

    照顾;过分保护

    I haven't got time to nursemaid you through these problems
    Example sentencesExamples
    • He wanted to look for Adam, not nursemaid some townie, but he understood what Roy was asking.
    • Major exporters included Navip in Serbia who nursemaided a joint project with the Japanese in a well-equipped winery near Belgrade.
    • Commander Laurel D' ken smiled wryly as the blue haired officer said to Allison, ‘We'll need to nursemaid them a bit but I think they'd be able to manage well enough.’
    • Kubrick had been nursemaiding this project along for almost two decades, awaiting the time when technology could produce visual effects at the level demanded by his perfectionism.
    • Poor Chihirae had her classes to attend, as well as nursemaiding me and that can't have been a pleasant job: bedridden, I couldn't use the toilet, I couldn't wash myself, couldn't feed myself.
    • His family have nursemaided him over the last few days.
    • It cannot be expected to nursemaid the thousands of firms that are operational in today's market and to do any of them justice.
    • After slaving to bring up children and nursemaid a man while simultaneously working to boost the family's income, they are the ones left to live out a lonely and unglamorous old age in penury.
    • In actuality she was overly nervous rather than arrogant, however, and Capra nursemaided her through the shooting.
    Synonyms
    pamper, spoil, overindulge, coddle, mollycoddle, cosset, nanny, nursemaid, mother, baby, pet, spoon-feed, feather-bed, wrap in cotton wool, overparent

Definition of nursemaid in US English:

nursemaid

nounˈnərsˌmādˈnərsˌmeɪd
dated
  • A woman or girl employed to look after a young child or children.

    (受雇照管儿童的女性)保姆

    Example sentencesExamples
    • It makes not Germany but France seem - in choral music as in Gluckian drama - the nursemaid of Classicism.
    • The care of children was normally the task of parents and the immediate family, but, amongst the wealthy, care was the responsibility of special servants, such as nursemaids or ‘nannies’.
    • By the age of four or five, children become nursemaids.
    • My grandmother was a nursemaid in high demand with the richest echelons of the London gentry.
    • Elsewhere at Great Taplows life is not what it might seem and young Lord Harry's nursemaid, the beautiful and clever Grace May, has painful choices to make about her future.
    • Anne moved closer to Amelia, feeling like a little girl again as she nearly clutched her nursemaid's skirts.
    • Then she looked the young nursemaid straight in the eye.
    • Their offspring were raised by an aunt and a succession of nursemaids.
    • Leopold had a sister Dora who was four years older than he was, and the other member of the household was Aleathea Starling who not only was nursemaid to the two young children but also looked after the family home.
    • As generations of nursemaids have claimed, ginger ale, America's oldest soda, is an effective stomach soother.
    • An unidentified but obviously affluent family is depicted in a richly appointed interior, while in an adjacent room, through an open door, a nursemaid and two children can be seen.
    • On each site young women - shopgirls, nursemaids, typists - operated the fire control equipment while men fired the guns.
    • There are a couple of them in the castle - Hugh MacDonald, who was incarcerated in the cellars with a platter of salt beef and an empty water jug, and the hapless nursemaid, who had the misfortune to drop the son and heir from an upstairs window.
    • The situations were the predictable ones, showing young boys (but sometimes men) seduced by women in a form of authority - governesses, nursemaids, nurses, schoolteachers, stepmothers.
    • Moreover, a one income family used to have a sort of safety net in the form of Mom, who could drop housework to become a nursemaid, emergency aid worker, or temporary wage earner.
    • My nursemaid Nysa used to say I was comely child, but I never thought so.
    • ‘I prefer to be a babysitter than a nursemaid,’ she has also reportedly said.
    • Cared for by nursemaids and educated largely at home, they were isolated from their peers - a fact sometimes compounded by their parents' political zeal.
    • A young nursemaid came forward with two sleeping babies, one only a few months old, the other almost a year.
    • Here, she's stuck in Westmount, hovering over a nasty, grumpy old husband, making her less of a life partner and more of a nursemaid.
    Synonyms
    nanny, governess, nursery nurse, nurserymaid, childminder, au pair, childcarer
verbˈnərsˌmādˈnərsˌmeɪd
[with object]
  • Look after or be overprotective toward.

    照顾;过分保护

    I haven't got time to nursemaid you through these blips
    Example sentencesExamples
    • In actuality she was overly nervous rather than arrogant, however, and Capra nursemaided her through the shooting.
    • Commander Laurel D' ken smiled wryly as the blue haired officer said to Allison, ‘We'll need to nursemaid them a bit but I think they'd be able to manage well enough.’
    • After slaving to bring up children and nursemaid a man while simultaneously working to boost the family's income, they are the ones left to live out a lonely and unglamorous old age in penury.
    • His family have nursemaided him over the last few days.
    • Major exporters included Navip in Serbia who nursemaided a joint project with the Japanese in a well-equipped winery near Belgrade.
    • He wanted to look for Adam, not nursemaid some townie, but he understood what Roy was asking.
    • Kubrick had been nursemaiding this project along for almost two decades, awaiting the time when technology could produce visual effects at the level demanded by his perfectionism.
    • It cannot be expected to nursemaid the thousands of firms that are operational in today's market and to do any of them justice.
    • Poor Chihirae had her classes to attend, as well as nursemaiding me and that can't have been a pleasant job: bedridden, I couldn't use the toilet, I couldn't wash myself, couldn't feed myself.
    Synonyms
    pamper, spoil, overindulge, coddle, mollycoddle, cosset, nanny, nursemaid, mother, baby, pet, spoon-feed, feather-bed, wrap in cotton wool, overparent
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