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gooseberry pudding

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English word gooseberry pudding comes from English man, Old English mann, Old English wimman, Old English wīf, and later Old English wifmann (Handmaid, female servant. Woman.)

man (English)

Only used in Used to place emphasis upon something or someone; sometimes, but not always, when actually addressing a man. (Multicultural London English, slang) Used to refer to oneself or one's group: I, we; construed in the third person.. (collective) All human males collectively: mankind.. (collective) All humans collectively: mankind, humankind, humanity. (Sometimes capitalized as Man.). [...]

mann (Old English)

Man (adult male). Person, human. The rune ᛗ, representing the sound /m/.

wimman (Old English)

wīf (Old English)

wifmann (Old English)

Handmaid, female servant. Woman.

wifman (Middle English)

woman (English)

(transitive) To furnish with, or unite to, a woman.. (transitive) To make effeminate or womanish.. To staff with female labor. (collective) All females collectively; womankind.. A female attendant or servant.. A female who is extremely fond of or devoted to a specified type of thing. (Used as the last element of a compound.). A wife (or sometimes a fiancée or girlfriend).. An adult female human.

gooseberry pudding (English)

(Cockney rhyming slang) A wife.. (Cockney rhyming slang) A woman.. A pudding made with gooseberries.

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