0%

All maria synonyms

MaΒ·riΒ·a
M m

noun maria

  • colt β€” A colt is a young male horse.
  • mare β€” Walter (John) 1873–1956, English poet, novelist, playwright, and short-story writer.
  • stallion β€” an uncastrated adult male horse, especially one used for breeding.
  • filly β€” a young female horse.
  • girl β€” a female child, from birth to full growth.
  • queen β€” Ellery, joint pen name of Manfred Bennington Lee and Frederick Dannay.
  • adult β€” An adult is a mature, fully developed person. An adult has reached the age when they are legally responsible for their actions.
  • female β€” a person bearing two X chromosomes in the cell nuclei and normally having a vagina, a uterus and ovaries, and developing at puberty a relatively rounded body and enlarged breasts, and retaining a beardless face; a girl or woman.
  • old woman β€” elderly lady
  • plug β€” an apparatus for splitting stone, consisting of two tapered bars (feathers) inserted into a hole drilled into the stone, between which a narrow wedge (plug) is hammered to spread them.
  • pony β€” a small horse of any of several breeds, usually not higher at the shoulder than 14Β½ hands (58 in./146 cm).
  • nag β€” to annoy by persistent faultfinding, complaints, or demands.
  • foal β€” a young horse, mule, or related animal, especially one that is not yet one year of age.
  • steed β€” a horse, especially a high-spirited one.
  • gelding β€” a castrated male animal, especially a horse.
  • mustang β€” a small, hardy horse of the American plains, descended from Spanish stock.
  • bronco β€” In the western United States, especially in the 19th century, a wild horse was sometimes referred to as a bronco.
  • matron β€” a married woman, especially one who is mature and staid or dignified and has an established social position.
  • doll β€” a female given name, form of Dorothy.
  • bitch β€” If someone calls a woman a bitch, they are saying in a very rude way that they think she behaves in a very unpleasant way.
  • rib β€” one of a series of curved bones that are articulated with the vertebrae and occur in pairs, 12 in humans, on each side of the vertebrate body, certain pairs being connected with the sternum and forming the thoracic wall.
  • broad β€” Something that is broad is wide.
  • dame β€” Dame is a title given to a woman as a special honour because of important service or work that she has done.
  • babe β€” Some people use babe as an affectionate way of addressing someone they love.
  • baroness β€” A baroness is a woman who is a member of the lowest rank of the nobility, or who is the wife of a baron.
  • mistress β€” a woman who has authority, control, or power, especially the female head of a household, institution, or other establishment.
  • noblewoman β€” a woman of noble birth or rank.
  • bag β€” A bag is a container made of thin paper or plastic, for example one that is used in shops to put things in that a customer has bought.
  • missus β€” missis.
  • sultana β€” a small, seedless raisin.
  • squaw β€” Older Use: Disparaging and Offensive. a contemptuous term used to refer to a North American Indian woman, especially a wife.
  • mama β€” Informal. mother1 .
  • butterfly β€” A butterfly is an insect with large colourful wings and a thin body.
  • gal β€” a centimeter-gram-second unit of acceleration, equal to one centimeter per second per second.
  • princess β€” a nonreigning female member of a royal family.
  • duchess β€” the wife or widow of a duke.
  • gentlewoman β€” a woman of good family, breeding, or social position.
  • countess β€” A countess is a woman who has the same rank as a count or earl, or who is married to a count or earl.
  • old lady β€” a mother, usually one's own.
  • old bag β€” a container or receptacle of leather, plastic, cloth, paper, etc., capable of being closed at the mouth; pouch.
  • contessa β€” an Italian countess
  • little woman β€” Used other than as an idiom: see little,β€Ž woman.
  • queen bee β€” a fertile female bee.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?