Definitions
Sorry, no definitions found. You may find more data at ladye.
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Ladye.
Examples
-
Fr Thomas Regan OSB of Belmont Abbey, and parish priest of Our Ladye & St. Michael's, Abergavenny, celebrated his 30th anniversary of priestly ordination the other day with High Mass in the Parish Church.
-
We call — that is, among ourselves, you understand — Miss Clara Mowbray, the sister of that gentleman that sits next to Miss Parker, the Dark Ladye, and that seat is left for her. —
Saint Ronan's Well 2008
-
McKennitt usually augments her own lyrics with an adaptation of a poem at some point on her albums, and does so again here with Sir Walter Scott's "The English Ladye And The Knight."
Loreena McKennitt, An Ancient Muse (Quinlan Road, 2006) smg58 2006
-
McKennitt usually augments her own lyrics with an adaptation of a poem at some point on her albums, and does so again here with Sir Walter Scott's "The English Ladye And The Knight."
Archive 2006-12-01 digitaldoc 2006
-
And there besyde, is the zate, where thorghe oure Ladye wente, whan sche was with childe, whan sche wente to Betheleem.
-
And there besyde, is the zate, where thorghe oure Ladye wente, whan sche was with childe, whan sche wente to Betheleem.
The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation 2003
-
With reference to this ointment, readers will probably recall the passage in SCOTT'S Lay of the Last Minstrel (canto 3, stanza 23), respecting the magical cure of WILLIAM of DELORAINE'S wound by "the Ladye of Branksome": --
Bygone Beliefs 1969
-
Widdecomb do it, when struck down by the infuriated Gomersal; and the poem generally concludes with a devout petition to "Our Ladye," not only to vouchsafe her grace to the defunct champion, but to grant that the living minstrel may experience the same end -- a prayer which, for the sake of several respectable young members of society, we hope may be utterly disregarded.
Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 61, No. 379, May, 1847 Various
-
Mr. Padgett had painted the large picture called "Ladye Myne" -- a burlesque of the "greenery-yallery" type then in fashion at the Grosvenor Gallery; and the departure of the apostle of the movement from these shores for the United States inspired the painter with the words and the drawing of the mourning "Ariadne," which were shown to the Editor of _Punch_ and forthwith inserted.
The History of "Punch" M. H. Spielmann
-
Annunciation, or, in the happier, more affectionate phrase of our forefathers, "the Gretynge of Our Ladye."
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.