- well-woman
- UK / US
adjective
a well-woman clinic or health programme is created to encourage and support good health in women
English dictionary. 2014.
English dictionary. 2014.
well woman — noun A woman attending, and pronounced fit at, a well woman clinic, set up to check women for gynaecological disorders and advise them on health matters • • • Main Entry: ↑well … Useful english dictionary
well-woman — adj [only before noun] providing medical care and advice for women, to make sure that they stay healthy ▪ a well woman clinic … Dictionary of contemporary English
well-woman — adjective a well woman CLINIC or health program is created to encourage and support good health in women … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
well-woman — UK US adjective a well woman clinic or health programme is created to encourage and support good health in women Thesaurus: words used to describe medical treatments, appliances and medicineshyponym … Useful english dictionary
well-woman — adjective (only before noun) providing medical care and advice for women, to make sure that they stay healthy: a well woman clinic … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
well — 1. adv., adj., & int. adv. (better, best) 1 in a satisfactory way (you have worked well). 2 in the right way (well said; you did well to tell me). 3 with some talent or distinction (plays the piano well). 4 in a kind way (treated me well). 5… … Useful english dictionary
Woman — • The position of woman in society has given rise to a discussion which, is known under the name of the woman question Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Woman Woman … Catholic encyclopedia
woman suffrage — woman suffrage, adj. woman suffragist, n. the right of women to vote; female suffrage. [1840 50] * * * Right of women by law to vote in national and local elections. Women s voting rights became an issue in the 19th century, especially in Britain … Universalium
Woman's Journal — was a women s rights periodical published from 1870 1931. Woman s Journal was founded in 1870 in Boston, Massachusetts by Lucy Stone and Henry B. Blackwell as a weekly newspaper. The new paper incorporated Mary A. Livermore s The Agitator , as… … Wikipedia
Well — Well, n. [OE. welle, AS. wella, wylla, from weallan to well up, surge, boil; akin to D. wel a spring or fountain. ????. See {Well}, v. i.] [1913 Webster] 1. An issue of water from the earth; a spring; a fountain. [1913 Webster] Begin, then,… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English