VAD
Appearance
See also: Appendix:Variations of "vad"
English
[edit]Noun
[edit]VAD (plural VADs)
- (historical) Initialism of Voluntary Aid Detachment: a women′s first-aid organisation active during World War I and World War II, or a member of this detachment; also V.A.D.
- 1925, Ford Madox Ford, No More Parades (Parade's End), Penguin, published 2012, page 328:
- ‘You've not been caught in bed with a V.A.D.?’ Tietjens asked.
- 1929, Ernest Hemingway, A Farewell to Arms, Folio Society, published 2008, page 32:
- ‘A nurse is like a doctor. It takes a long time to be. A VAD is a short cut.’
- 1998, David Ellis, D. H. Lawrence: Dying Game 1922-1930: The Cambridge Biography of D. H. Lawrence[1], page 29:
- If Mollie Skinner was ever technically a member of a Voluntary Aid Detachment in India she would have been an unusually experienced and well-qualified one. VADs were more frequently lady amateurs […] .
- 2006, Desmond Keenan, Post-Famine Ireland: Social Structure: Ireland as it Really Was[2], page 176:
- There was also the Dublin University VAD, or Voluntary Aid Detachment branch of Dublin University Women graduates and undergraduates.
- 2008, Celia M. Kingsbury, Chapter 2: Food Will Win the War, Kathleen LeBesco, Peter Naccarato (editors), Edible Ideologies: Representing Food and Meaning, State University of New York Press, 46,
- Smith, pseudonym for freelance writer Evadne Price, obtained the war journal of a V.A.D. by the name of Winifred Young, who had turned over the diary with the stipulation that Price remain faithful to the tone.
- (medicine) Initialism of ventricular assist device.