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Examples of madwoman in a Sentence
She is a madwoman on the dance floor.
Recent Examples on the Web
Manhunt has offered suggestion after suggestion that Mary Todd Lincoln’s madwoman reputation is a distortion of history by depicting the ways she and, by extension, all women were sidelined and condescended to.
—Keith Phipps, Vulture, 19 Apr. 2024
Lili Taylor’s performance does not summon up the madwoman Mary is sometimes depicted as being, and the series depicts Elizabeth Keckley (Get Out’s Betty Gabriel), Mary’s friend — a renowned seamstress and, later, author — as a kind of tempering influence.
—Keith Phipps, Vulture, 15 Mar. 2024
Steeped in fascinating tidbits about her life, Swift recounts how Harkness, who inherited the riches from her oil tycoon husband’s untimely death and even became the richest woman in America at one point, was considered an outcast and a madwoman for her unconventional choices and lavish lifestyle.
—Samantha Cooney, TIME, 16 Apr. 2024
Though the role of the madwoman has long been central to the operatic imagination, the conditions and attitudes faced by Nellie Bly — dismissal, doubt, bias and abuse — remain pervasive realities for woman confronting trauma today.
—Michael Andor Brodeur, Washington Post, 22 Sep. 2023
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Word History
First Known Use
15th century, in the meaning defined above
Time Traveler
The first known use of madwoman was
in the 15th century
Phrases Containing madwoman
Dictionary Entries Near madwoman
Cite this Entry
“Madwoman.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/madwoman. Accessed 24 Nov. 2024.
Kids Definition
madwoman
noun
mad·wom·an
ˈmad-ˌwu̇m-ən
: a woman who is or who acts as if mentally unsound
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