senatress

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English

Etymology

From senator +‎ -ess.

Noun

senatress (plural senatresses)

  1. (uncommon) A female senator.
    • 1731, Thornhagh Gurdon, The History of the High Court of Parliament, page 200:
      Heliogabalus introduced his Mother into the Senate, and she took her Place there by the Seats of the Consuls, and was present at passing a Decree of the Senate. This Emperor made the first Senatress; he created a little Senate of Women, which met on Collis Quirinalis under the Direction of Semiamira, and the Laws they made concerning the Ladies, ....
    • 1905, Francis Marion Crawford, Ave Roma Immortalis: Studies from the Chronicles of Rome, Library of Alexandria, page 260:
      The researches of the learned Coppi make it almost certain that the Colonna descend from Theodora, the Senatress of Roma, who flourished in the year 914; ....
    • 1932 October 29, Helen E. Hokinson, “(cartoon)”, in The New Yorker, page 18:
      "And I take pleasure in presenting to you a lady you all know, State Senator Rumbley—or is it Senatress?"
    • 1972, Donald Hamilton, The Intriguers (A Matt Helm novel), Fawcett Publications, →ISBN, page 49:
      "If I said the lady was an elected representative of the US people, with strange political notions and strong presidential ambitions, would that help?" I whistled softly. "You mean the senatress, herself?"
    • 2008, T. Manning, Larvatus Prodeo, The Interview, Xlibris, →ISBN, page 183:
      This scandal resulted in the intervention by a US congresswoman and future US senatress (as she preferred to be called) and vice president of the United States of America ....

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