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Wiktionary英語版での「auctioneeress」の意味 |
auctioneeress
語源
From auctioneer + -ess.
名詞
auctioneeress (複数形 auctioneeresses)
- (nonstandard) A female auctioneer.
- 1914 July 1, The Argus, page 20, column 3:
- Mr. FRED NIBLO / Has Kindly Volunteered to Conduct / A SALE by AUCTION / In perfect good faith, as an accessory after the act, of Fancy Articles, and Useful Goods Stolen, Borrowed, or Bought by the Society Belles of the Ladies’ Committee. He will be assisted by a bevy of / FASCINATING AUCTIONEERESSES, / Selected from the Leading Theatres, / “Cards to View on Application.”
- 1918, American Shorthorn Breeder’s Association, The Shorthorn in America, page 14, column 3:
- Several of three occupations have little appeal for women—but I dare say that some day an indubitably clever auctioneeress will mark that statement as reactionary.
- 1919, Brazil, Angela, The Head Girl at the Gables, New York: Frederick A. Stokes Company, published 1920, pages 124, 126:
- The amateur auctioneer—or rather auctioneeress—seized upon the first thing that came to hand, which happened to be one of Claire’s discarded dolls. […] “Time’s getting on, and we put up the shutters at five,” continued the loquacious auctioneeress.
- [1923 June 1, The Ladies’ Mirror: The Fashionable Ladies’ Journal of New Zealand, volume I, number 12, page 5, columns 2–3:
- So am I, but I foresee trouble over her designation. Some people, in fact the majority, seem to hug the pedantry of insisting upon the feminine form of titles that up to present have been held only by men. This scribe thinks that no sex distinction is necessary in such matters. Shall this female auctioneer be called “auctioneeress,” in the manner that some maltreat the word “poet” by making it “poetess,” and “author” by changing it to “authoress”? Clumsy and the reverse of euphonious, don’t you think? Almost it would be better to speak and write of “she-poets” and “she-auctioneers”! Surely, where sex does not matter, such words as these could be left in their ordinary form, at least until more euphonious forms could be evolved.]
- 1962, Harbor High School, Mariner, page 132:
- [1993, Exum, J. Cheryl, Fragmented Women: Feminist (Sub)versions of Biblical Narratives, →ISBN:
- Equally unnecessary is marking the presence of women by the suffix ‘ess’, which not only sounds like a diminutive (the ‘little woman’) but also gives the impression that women in these positions are anomalies that need to be singled out: sculptress, poetess, prophetess, priestess, even Ruth the Moabitess. And if one should ever find it necessary to use the plural, the result is quite a mouthful: poetesses, prophetesses, Moabitesses, etc. I have heard on the BBC in the last year the forms ‘auctioneeress’, ‘manageress’, and even ‘lecturess’. Scholaresses beware.]
- 1994, Fischer, Tibor, The Thought Gang, Vintage, published 1999, →ISBN, pages 1, 2:
- Present holder: auctioneeress. […] The auctioneeress nods, slightly oddly. […] I, on the other hand, interpret it as the auctioneeress biting the inside of her mouth to stop herself laughing, because he is, in addition to being a lugal, a clown, a multi-storey car park filled with jalopies of laughability, soooooo preposterous, a baboon of prodigious risibility; […] The auctioneeress looks up to the sky as if pondering its cruelty, but more likely to give her teeth the chance to hang on to her cheeks.
- 1997, Fischer, Tibor, The Collector Collector, Metropolitan Books, →ISBN, pages 3, 11, 115, 139, 198, 219:
- She is probably assigning me a price (she works for the auctioneeress, so she must know how much money it takes to stop a bowl with my features). […] Nikki tries to see the auctioneeress, but she is out. […] Rosa has told him that I’ve been given back to the custody of the auctioneeress, and she, conveniently, as Rosa knows, is away on holiday for two weeks in an unobtainable style. Which is doubly convenient for Rosa, since the auctioneeress, too, has been asking for me. […] She planned to stay for a few weeks, but she gets a call from the auctioneeress telling her about a pair of earrings. […] The auctioneeress arrives, and I am packed away. […] We stop outside as the auctioneeress delves into her purse for her car keys. The auctioneeress can’t hear it, but I can perceive the phone ringing in Rosa’s flat.
- 2005 August 25, “Up and Down the Wine Roads: Land trust fund-raiser”, in The Weekly Calistogan:
- The loudest applause of the auction came when "auctioneeress" Urusla[sic] Hermacinski asked the crowd who would like to donate $100 to the Land Trust and receive nothing but satisfaction of supporting a wonderful cause.
- 2008, Wendorf, Richard, The Literature of Collecting & Other Essays, →ISBN, page 40:
- And the least successful, for he is frustrated in his pursuit by the auctioneeress, by Rosa, the conservator to whom she entrusts the vase, by Nikki, the promiscuous kleptomaniac who moves in with Rosa, by a raucous assortment of dealers, thieves, and fences — and not least by the ingenious vase itself, which, once locked within a safe, “deformed and dedesigned in the dark, emerging as the dullest Wedgwood I could imagine” (16).
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auctioneeresses
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