See also: -vrouw

EnglishEdit

EtymologyEdit

Borrowed from Dutch vrouw. Doublet of frow and frau.

NounEdit

vrouw (plural vrouws or vrouwen)

  1. A Dutchwoman.
    • 1786, Account of the India Guide (in Walker's Hibernian magazine)
      So the Vrouws, in a minuet, solemnly prance
      Like a bear, at a fair, that is tutor'd to dance.
    • 1840, The United States magazine and Democratic review: Volume 7 (page 158)
      Those whose rank excluded them from a participation in the town deliberations drew closer to their firesides; the vrouws, both old and young, edged their seats nigher to each other []
    • 1898, Mrs. John King Van Rensselaer [i.e., May King Van Rensselaer], The Goede Vrouw of Mana-ha-ta at Home and in Society, 1609-1760, New York, N.Y.: Charles Scribner’s Sons, page 131:
      The Dutch vrouwen controlled their households as before, and governed their husbands with silken threads.
    • 1913, Dorothea Fairbridge, That Which Hath Been, South Africa: T. Maskew Miller, page 309:
      One by one those who had come to jeer slipped away, Pieter van der Byl murmuring incoherently of the hot sun and van der Heyden of the chilly evening, until finally Huysing turned abruptly from the pier and strode away, with a curt order to the waiting slaves to carry the vrouwen back to Zee Straat.
    • 1917, Continent, page 1381:
      [] thrifty Dutch burghers and vrouwen are busy about town and home; []
    • 1968, R[alph] N[ixon] Currey, editor, Letters and Other Writings of a Natal Sheriff, Thomas Phipson 1815-76, Cape Town: Oxford University Press, →ISBN, page 171:
      But really I have never heard that the up-country vrouwen were in such a violent hurry for baftas and punjums but what the ox-wagons and local stores there could keep them supplied.

DutchEdit

 
Dutch Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia nl
 
Een blonde vrouw.
A blonde woman.

EtymologyEdit

From Middle Dutch vrouwe, from Old Dutch frouwa, from Proto-Germanic *frawjǭ.

PronunciationEdit

  • IPA(key): /vrɑu̯/
  • (file)
  • Hyphenation: vrouw
  • Rhymes: -ɑu̯

NounEdit

vrouw f (plural vrouwen, diminutive vrouwtje n or vrouwetje n or vrouwke n)

  1. woman
  2. wife
    Synonym: echtgenote

Derived termsEdit

Related termsEdit

DescendantsEdit

  • Afrikaans: vrou
  • Negerhollands: vro, vrou, frou, fru, vrow
    • Virgin Islands Creole: fru (dated)
  • Aukan: folow
  • English: vrouw
  • Sranan Tongo: frow