View example sentences and word forms for Matrons.
Matrons meaning
plural of matron
Example sentences (14)
Her adventures in the many Queer-Tanic trips, the Salt Lake Men's Choir, the Matrons of Mayhem, and Utah Prides and Lagoon Days have been canonized the past 15 years in a monthly column in QSaltLake Magazine, Utah's publication for the LGBTQ+ community.
Eve Galloway: "I worked on the switchboard there in the 70's Maud Matrons secretary, the great porters we used to have such fun with them.
It has two GPs, two matrons and two social prescribers all working together to help support patients who may be at risk of frailty.
Ernie’s boys service moguls and movie stars, housewives and society matrons, including glamorous Avis (Patti LuPone), wife of old-school studio chief Ace Amberg (Rob Reiner).
He further charged the dormitory girls and their matrons to preserve the privileged facilities provided them, promising to occasionally inspect the area to assess maintenance.
Matrons, Chief Nursing Officers, Senior Nurses, Heads of Laboratories and other Heads of Departments do not go on strike.
The Thembalami Care Centre hosted a special 60th surprise birthday party for one of their matrons, Paulina Hlatshwako recently.
By the number of matrons, the posterity of 40 maidens, kyrk-kyz, began to be called Kyrgyz people.
Gage was initiated into the Wolf Clan and admitted into the Iroquois Council of Matrons for her outspoken respect and sympathy for Native American people; it would seem unlikely that Baum could have harbored animosity for them in his mature years.
However, they signified approval from matrons of the highest social rank at key moments of her life.
In one, it commemorates the virtuous offer by Roman matrons of their own hair to make bowstrings during a siege of Rome.
Only women are allowed to be Matrons, Conductresses, and the Star Points (Adah, Ruth, etc.) and only men can be Patrons.
The Germanic peoples had altars erected to the "Mothers and Matrons" and held celebrations specific to these goddeses (such as the Anglo-Saxon "Mothers-night" ).
The wailing cry of the matrons was heard everywhere, not only in private houses but even in the temples.