Mrses

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See also: Mrses.

English

Noun

Mrses

  1. (rare) plural of Mrs
    Synonym: Mmes
    • 1788 November 21, [Elénor-François-Elie,] Le C[om]te de Moustier, anonymous translator, “From Moustier”, in Dorothy Twohig, editor, The Papers of George Washington, Presidential Series, volume 1 (September 1788–March 1789), Charlottesville, Va.: University Press of Virginia, published 1987, →ISBN, page 122:
      Mde La Mise de Brehan is sensibly touched with the pleasing attention which she experienced from you and the Mrses Washingtons, and has charged me to give her particular thanks to you and beg you, Sir, to tender her sincere compliments to them, to which permit me to have the honor of joining my respectful acknowledgements.
      Taken from a translation prepared for George Washington.
    • 2003, Rob Baum, Female Absence: Women, Theatre, and Other Metaphors, Brussels: P.I.E.-Peter Lang, →ISBN, page 89:
      Only women already existing in the social margins became actresses.26 For example, celebrated tragedienne Elizabeth Barry was an orphan, Nell Gwynn a barmaid raised in a brothel, Moll Davis the illegitimate daughter of a Colonel. Other actresses were the wives and daughters of male actors, as for example Mary Saunderson (Mrs Betterton) and (in a later period) Mrses Kean, Kemble and Siddons.
    • 2004 [1930], D[avid] H[erbert] Lawrence, “Do Women Change”, in James T[hompson] Boulton, editor, Late Essays and Articles (The Cambridge Edition of the Works of D. H. Lawrence), Cambridge, Cambs.: Cambridge University Press, →ISBN, pages 151–152:
      In Rome, in Syracuse, in Athens, in Thebes, more than two or three thousand years ago, there was the bobbed-haired, painted, perfumed Miss and Mrs of today, and she inspired almost exactly the feelings that our painted and perfumed Misses and Mrses inspire, in the men.
      Originally Mrs. and Mrses.