Definition of "sergeantess"
sergeantess
noun
plural sergeantesses
Quotations
Mrs. Taradoodle,Sergeantess at Mace.
1684, The Parliament of Women, or, A Compleat History of the Proceedings and Debates, of a Particular Junto, of Ladies and Gentlewomen, with a Design to Alter the Government of the World by Way of Satyr, London: […] John Holford, page 13
They have regular recruiting sergeants and sergeantesses, whom they send out to lie in wait for the unwary, and after intoxicating them with the poison of superstition, induce them to enlist.
1846, Dan Mendon, “Finesse.—Denunciation—Threatened Judgment—The Power of a Curse.—Proselyting.”, in Lo Here and Lo There! or, The Grave of the Heart, New York, N.Y.: […] the Author, page 77
Miss Belle Rolston was the orderly sergeantess, as Richard Grant White might say, and acquitted herself of her important duties in a faultless manner, receiving the highest praise for her accurate knowledge of every detail and graceful demeanor.
1882 October 9, Wisconsin State Journal, volume XXXI, number 41, Madison, Wis.
The girls are uniformed, armed and soldierly equipped, wearing navy blue dresses with white trimmings and fatigue caps. The gun is the same that was used during the recent political campaign by marching political organizations. There are thirty-two in the company. Franc. Oliver, one of the teachers, is “first sergeantess.”
1889 January 12, Buffalo Courier, volume LIV, number 12, Buffalo, N.Y., page 5
Miss Skittish was carrying on a fan flirtation with a distinguished male stranger in the gallery, and this being severely animadverted on by six or seven hon. members at the same moment, the deep-bayed voice of the Sergeantess-at-Arms was not at first heard.
1885 June 13, Moonshine, volume XI, page 286
Having seen to securing the chair for one of her partisans, and the sergeantess-at-arms for another, who was equipped for her martial duties with baby-blue eyes and dimples, she awaited with confidence the onslaught of the enemy, having had, not spies exactly, but, let us say, fountains of information in the hostile camp.
1916, Edwin Milton Royle, Peace and Quiet, Harper & Brothers, page 111
Officers are (left to right, seated) Opal Rogers, second vice-president; Edythe Sego, president; and Xerma Langston, secretary; (standing, same order) Millie Hoeckendorf, first vice-president; Dottie Fink, sergeantess at arms; and Buddy Childers, treasurer.
1963 February 17, The Irving Daily News Texan, volume 57, number 40, Irving, Tex., page 1
This was the same fiery hell to which the Sergeantess (as she was known) would have liked to dispatch Capote and his gang, whenever she caught them throwing lit matches into the green letter boxes on the mezzanine. […] Anyway, at the time, my principal means of amusement before lunch was to read Zane Grey novels while seated outside Studio Akerman, from where I could also hear the news bulletin on National Radio emanating from the Sergeantess’s apartment.
2012, Guillermo Busutil, “Murder at the Atlantic”, in Margaret Jull Costa, transl., edited by Helen Constantine, Madrid Tales, Oxford University Press, pages 92–93
“Do you like Gigi D’Alessio, Sergeantess?” he asked me as he handed them over. “Sergeant,” I corrected him. If he thought he’d get a hysterical reaction, he was mistaken: I smiled. I wanted to assert myself mildly.
2014, Melania G[aia] Mazzucco, translated by Virginia Jewiss, Limbo, New York, N.Y.: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, page 70