wench

/wɛnt͡ʃ/

wench

English Noun Top 13,129
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Definition

A girl or young woman, especially a buxom or lively one.

Etymology

The noun is derived from Middle English wench, wenche (“female baby; girl (especially unmarried); maiden, young woman; bondwoman; serving maid; beloved, sweetheart; concubine, mistress; harlot, prostitute”) [and other forms], a shortened form of Middle English wenchel (“girl; maiden; child”), from Old English wenċel, winċel (“child; servant; slave”), from Proto-Germanic *wankilą, from Proto-Germanic *wankijaną (“to sway; waver”). The English word is cognate with Old High German wenken (“to waver; to give way, yield”), wankōn (“to totter”). The verb is derived from the noun.

Example Sentences

  • "Jane played the role of a wench in an Elizabethan comedy."
  • "I, like a tẽder harted vvench, ſkriked out for feare of the divell."
  • "hee weepes like a wench that had ſhed her / milke, he hath confeſt himſelfe to Morgan, whom hee ſuppoſes to be a Friar, [...]"
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