woman
n.
adult female; female human being; female spouse (Informal); collective womankind; female person who plays an important part in the life of a specific notorious man; girlfriend, female lover (Informal)
v.
staff with women; make womanish, make effeminate
adj.
female (e.g.: a woman bus driver; a woman dentist); like a woman, womanly; of woman
Woman
A woman is a
female human. The term woman (irregular plural: women) usually is used for an adult, with the term
girl being the usual term for a female child or adolescent. However, the term woman is also sometimes used to identify a female human, regardless of age, as in phrases such as "
Women's rights".
See more at Wikipedia.org...
Woman
(v. t.)
To make effeminate or womanish.
(v. t.)
To furnish with, or unite to, a woman.
(v. t.)
To act the part of a woman in; -- with indefinite it.
(n.)
The female part of the human race; womankind.
(n.)
An adult female person; a grown-up female person, as distinguished from a man or a child; sometimes, any female person.
(n.)
A female attendant or servant.
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913), edited by Noah Porter.
About
Woman
Woman In philosophy, symbolizes the mother aspect of nature or feminine characteristic of the universe always found in the triads of Father-Mother-Son (changed in the Christian scheme to Father, Son, and Holy Ghost -- the Holy Spirit in primitive Christianity always being considered feminine). From time immemorial it has been customary to associate primordial spirit-substance, later becoming matter, with the cosmic feminine principle represented symbolically by a horizontal line); and spirit has always been associated with the masculine principle (represented by a vertical line); but the words feminine and masculine are merely borrowed from human beings, and the characteristics of originating cosmic principles were far better expressed by pairs of opposites such as negative and positive.
In cosmogenesis, the feminine principle is represented by the waters of space or great deep, often called the womb of nature. From this figure of speech was born the conception found in some ancient cosmogonies, such as the Hebrew, of the ark, containing all the germs of lives of a universe and pictured as resting or moving on the cosmic waters. Another symbol for the feminine principle was that of the lotus, which likewise rests upon the water, finally rising above it when it blossoms. One symbol of the universe in germ before any aspect of manifestation occurs is the matripadma or closed "mother lotus," before the cosmic blossom has been quickened by spirit into expanding into becoming the universe. It is also referred to as devamatri (the divine mother), the matrix from which all the suns and planets were born.
In the cosmogony of the Hebrew Qabbalah, the first Sephirah which emanates from latent divinity is at times represented as feminine; yet when this feminine emanation becomes creative it is then represented as conjoining masculine traits with its own, so that at this stage it is envisaged as masculine-feminine. This first spiritual emanation, emanating from itself the next phase of cosmogonical production, is termed the Shechinah, the mother of all the successively emanated Sephiroth. Thus the Shechinah is an echo of archaic Hindu cosmogonic speculation, corresponding to pradhana or prakriti.
to be continue "
Woman2 "
woman
<
tool> A replacement for the
Unix man documentation browsing command. Version 1.157 of woman runs under/on
386BSD,
OSF,
Apollo Domain/OS,
BSD,
HP-UX,
IBM RS-6000,
Irix,
Linux,
Solaris,
Sony NEWS,
SunOS,
Ultrix,
Unicos.
Posted to comp.sources.reviewed Volume 3, Issue 50 on 05 Jul 1993 by Arne Henrik Juul
arnej@pvv.unit.no, archive-name woman-1.157.
FTP USC, USA.
FTP Imperial, UK.
(1995-03-21)
(c) Copyright 1993 by Denis Howe