English edit

Etymology edit

egg +‎ -woman

Noun edit

eggwoman (plural eggwomen)

  1. A woman who delivers eggs.
    • 1864, Coast Castle: Its Environs, Its Inhabitants and Its Visitors, page 44:
      One Sunday morning, when the family were all sitting at breakfast discussing buttered “baps,” fresh eggs, — as fresh as ever were laid, old Peggy, the eggwoman, had informed them,—and café au lait, all solemnly and silently engaged in the business,— Letty broke silence thus, —
    • 1907 April, Eliza Ruhamah Scidmore, “At Home—Colonel and Mrs. Vladimir von Theill”, in As The Hague Ordains: Journal of a Russian Prisoner’s Wife in Japan, New York, N.Y.: Henry Holt and Company, →OCLC, page 303:
      The butcher, the baker, the greengrocer, the old eggwoman, the vegetable dealer from the country, the fishman, every one who in any way purveyed to my little household, came to lay presents on the sunny engawa.
    • 1960, V. T. Calnan, The Blood of Gennaro, page 81:
      So! Even the provincials knew his humiliation. The eggwoman, next, would be offering him sympathy!