21 ผลลัพธ์ สำหรับ -wiv-
หรือค้นหา: -wiv-, *wiv*

ตัวอย่างประโยคจาก Tanaka JP-EN Corpus
wiv"Gang Wives" is a Yakuza movie released in 1986 by Toei Distribution Network.
wivHowever, like America, Japan is predominantly a middle-class, middle-income country, and so wives do not employ maids, but attend to everything themselves.
wivHusbands and wives should stand by each other throughout their life.
wivIn all times and places many examples of good relations between wives and mothers-in-law can be seen.
wivIt is their husbands' faults if wives do fall.
wivMany families now have two breadwinners with both husbands and wives working.
wivMany wives complain about high prices.
wivSome Japanese wives are content to leave their husbands alone.
wivThese days more young husbands help their wives with housework.
wivWhen we think of the traditional roles of men and women in society, we think of husbands supporting the family, and wives taking care of the house and children.
wivWives usually outlive husbands.

WordNet (3.0)
wive(v) take (someone) as a wife
wive(v) marry a woman, take a wife
wive(v) provide with a wife; marry (someone) to a wife

Collaborative International Dictionary (GCIDE)
Wive

v. t. 1. To match to a wife; to provide with a wife. “An I could get me but a wife . . . I were manned, horsed, and wived.” Shak. [ 1913 Webster ]

2. To take for a wife; to marry. [ 1913 Webster ]

I have wived his sister. Sir W. Scott. [ 1913 Webster ]

Wive

v. i. [ imp. & p. p. Wived p. pr. & vb. n. Wiving. ] [ AS. wīfian, gewīfian. See Wite. ] To marry, as a man; to take a wife. [ 1913 Webster ]

Wherefore we pray you hastily to wive. Chaucer. [ 1913 Webster ]

Wivehood

n. Wifehood. [ Obs. ] Spenser. [ 1913 Webster ]

Wiveless

a. Wifeless. [ Obs. ] Homilies. [ 1913 Webster ]

Wively

a. Wifely. [ Obs. ] Udall. [ 1913 Webster ]

Wivern

{ } n. [ OE. wivere a serpent, OF. wivre, guivre, F. givre, guivre, wiver, from L. vipera; probably influenced by OHG. wipera, from the Latin. See Viper, and cf. Weever. ] [ 1913 Webster ]

1. (Her.) A fabulous two-legged, winged creature, like a cockatrice, but having the head of a dragon, and without spurs. [ Written also wyvern. ] [ 1913 Webster ]

The jargon of heraldry, its griffins, its mold warps, its wiverns, and its dragons. Sir W. Scott. [ 1913 Webster ]

2. (Zool.) The weever. [ 1913 Webster ]

Variants: Wiver
Wives

n., pl. of Wife. [ 1913 Webster ]


Time: 0.0414 seconds, cache age: 9.936 (clear)Longdo Dict -- https://dict.longdo.com/