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Grandmother   /grˈændmˌəðər/  /grˈænmˌəðər/  /grˈæmˌəðər/   Listen
noun
Grandmother  n.  The mother of one's father or mother.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Grandmother" Quotes from Famous Books



... either once covered or yet to be covered, shoe buttons (which invariably were in practical demand and invariably had sunk to the bottom of the box), strange great buttons from some long-forgotten garment of grandmother's, familiar buttons from some newly remembered ...
— Penguin Persons & Peppermints • Walter Prichard Eaton

... a regular character," Janet eagerly went on, to Hilda's great content. "Some people don't like him. But I rather do like him." She was always thus kind. "Grandmother once told me he sprang from simply nothing at all—worked on a potbank when he ...
— Hilda Lessways • Arnold Bennett

... little of the struggles of those long-past years; and we went out on the porch, as the evening shadows fell, and looked out over the valley and stream and hills of his youth, and he told of his grandmother, and of a young Marylander who had come to the region on a visit; it was a tale of the impetuous love of those two, of rash marriage, of the interference of parents, of the fierce rivalry of another suitor, of an attack on the Marylander's life, of passionate hastiness, of unforgivable words, ...
— Acres of Diamonds • Russell H. Conwell

... on the shelf, and taken down, like Goldsmith or Defoe or Bunyan, for an hour's gossip; cried over by the young girl of the family, diverting the holiday of the schoolboy, and exercising the eyesight of the good old grandmother. But how is this ever to be achieved nowadays? Who will be ever thumbed over and spelled ...
— Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine - Volume 55, No. 343, May 1844 • Various

... class of Attila the Hun and Genghis Khan. Thrips feed on the underside of rose leaves, sucking their juice and causing them to turn yellow; and Lord Marshmoreton's views on these things were so rigid that he would have poured whale-oil solution on his grandmother if he had found her on the underside of one of his rose leaves ...
— A Damsel in Distress • Pelham Grenville Wodehouse


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