English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From babushka +‎ -ed.

Adjective edit

babushkaed (not comparable)

  1. Wearing a babushka (headscarf).
    • 1943 February 11, “Eggspert Farmer”, in Mrs. Chattie Coleman Westenius, editor and publisher, The Headlight[1], volume 57, number 40, Stromsburg, Neb.:
      This babushkaed Miss is Adah Polak, one of the girls taking the farm course at the Farmingdale State Institute of Applied Agriculture, Farmingdale, L. I., to enable them to take farm jobs.
    • 1945 March 16, Sault Daily Star, volume XXXIV, number 1, Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., page 9:
      Babushkaed Royalty At Tree-Planting Ceremony
    • 1997 March 14, Debra Cash, “Lesson in classic modern”, in The Boston Globe, volume 251, number 73, page C11:
      The shapes here are dense and collective, the babushkaed dancers riding the pulse that motivates the music and anchors Zoltan Kodaly’s score.