duckess
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Noun
[edit]duckess (plural duckesses)
- (rare) A female duck.
- 1920, Lawton Mackall, “Beyond the Paling”, in Scrambled Eggs, Stewart & Kidd Company, page 37:
- But the thrust that got Eustace in the pin feathers was: “I know why you’re such a model drake,—it’s because your wife is the only duckess in the barnyard.” “Not at all!” he replied. “The principles for which I stand are absolute. They would be the same if there were a hundred duckesses besides Gertrude!”
- 1938 September 17, “From the Editor’s Easy Chair”, in Welford Beaton, editor, Hollywood Spectator, thirteenth year, volume 13, number 17, Los Angeles, Calif., section “Mental Meanderings”, page six, column 2:
- And here come Sophie and her four offsprings which we have been unable thus far to segregate into ducks and duckesses. Manchester, the biggest of the lot, makes a specialty of pecking at my shoelaces.
- 1953, The Fortnightly Review of the Chicago Dental Society, page 18, column 2:
- Harold does not like to shoot little ducks and duckesses himself, but he got some swell camera shots of some of his friends in action.
Translations
[edit]female duck — see duck