- well-woman
- ,well-`woman adjectivea well-woman CLINIC or health program is created to encourage and support good health in women
Usage of the words and phrases in modern English. 2013.
Usage of the words and phrases in modern English. 2013.
well woman — noun A woman attending, and pronounced fit at, a well woman clinic, set up to check women for gynaecological disorders and advise them on health matters • • • Main Entry: ↑well … Useful english dictionary
well-woman — adj [only before noun] providing medical care and advice for women, to make sure that they stay healthy ▪ a well woman clinic … Dictionary of contemporary English
well-woman — UK US adjective a well woman clinic or health programme is created to encourage and support good health in women Thesaurus: words used to describe medical treatments, appliances and medicineshyponym … Useful english dictionary
well-woman — adjective (only before noun) providing medical care and advice for women, to make sure that they stay healthy: a well woman clinic … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
well-woman — UK / US adjective a well woman clinic or health programme is created to encourage and support good health in women … English dictionary
well — 1. adv., adj., & int. adv. (better, best) 1 in a satisfactory way (you have worked well). 2 in the right way (well said; you did well to tell me). 3 with some talent or distinction (plays the piano well). 4 in a kind way (treated me well). 5… … Useful english dictionary
Woman — • The position of woman in society has given rise to a discussion which, is known under the name of the woman question Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Woman Woman … Catholic encyclopedia
woman suffrage — woman suffrage, adj. woman suffragist, n. the right of women to vote; female suffrage. [1840 50] * * * Right of women by law to vote in national and local elections. Women s voting rights became an issue in the 19th century, especially in Britain … Universalium
Woman's Journal — was a women s rights periodical published from 1870 1931. Woman s Journal was founded in 1870 in Boston, Massachusetts by Lucy Stone and Henry B. Blackwell as a weekly newspaper. The new paper incorporated Mary A. Livermore s The Agitator , as… … Wikipedia
Well — Well, n. [OE. welle, AS. wella, wylla, from weallan to well up, surge, boil; akin to D. wel a spring or fountain. ????. See {Well}, v. i.] [1913 Webster] 1. An issue of water from the earth; a spring; a fountain. [1913 Webster] Begin, then,… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English