English

edit

Etymology

edit

Borrowed from Latin machinatrix; equivalent to machinate +‎ -trix.

Noun

edit

machinatrix (plural machinatrices)

  1. A woman who machinates; a schemer, plotter.
    • 1902, Watson Bradshaw, "Medea", Act II., in The Ten Tragedies of Seneca, page 421.
      No; thou! thou art the sole machinatrix of all these terrible crimes, thou whose wickedness as a woman is supplemented with that masculine strength which has endowed thee with the audacity to perpetrate such deeds []
edit