Housemother
[hous-muhth-er] /ˈhaʊsˌmʌð ər/
noun
1.
a woman in charge of a residence, especially for children, students, or young women, who acts as hostess, chaperon, and occasionally as housekeeper.
Read Also:
- House-mouse
noun 1. a brownish-gray Old World mouse, Mus musculus, now common in the U.S. in or near houses. noun 1. any of various greyish mice of the Old World genus Mus, esp M. musculus, a common household pest in most parts of the world: family Muridae
- House-music
noun 1. an up-tempo style of disco music characterized by deep bass rhythms, piano or synthesizer melodies, and soul-music singing, sometimes with elements of rap music. noun 1. a type of disco music originating in the late 1980s, based on funk, with fragments of other recordings edited in electronically
- House-of-assembly
noun 1. the legislature or the lower house of the legislature in certain countries of the Commonwealth of Nations. noun 1. a legislative assembly or the lower chamber of such an assembly, esp in various British colonies and countries of the Commonwealth
- House-of-assignation
noun 1. a brothel.
- House-of-burgesses
noun 1. the assembly of representatives in colonial Virginia.