Women
1Women — Women played an important role in traditional Scandinavian rural society, where their labor power was urgently needed and where, for example, being the mistress of a farm was a position of authority and respect. The worlds of politics,… …
Historical Dictionary of Scandinavian Literature and Theater
2Women — Women have played a vital role in the economic life of Brussels since the origins of the city. They provided a core element of the workforce in the cloth trade, and, later, in other luxury industries, notably lace production. In the 19th… …
3Women — Women in Egypt had the most secure position of females anywhere in the ancient world. During the Pharaonic Period, women were recognized as having equal legal rights as men and therefore had the right to own, inherit, and manage property and… …
4Women — bezeichnet: Women – for America, for the World, US amerikanischer Dokumentarfilm (1986) The Women, US amerikanische Filmkomödie (1939), siehe Die Frauen (Film) The Women – Von großen und kleinen Affären, US amerikanische Filmkomödie (2008) Diese… …
5WOMEN — s Organizational Movement For Equality Now (Miscellaneous » Funnies) * Women Opposing Men s Egotistical Nature (Miscellaneous » Funnies) …
6Women — Wom en, n., pl. of {Woman}. [1913 Webster] …
7-women — [wim′in] combining form suffix combining form pl. of WOMAN * * * …
8Women — Although obviously half of the population of Renaissance Eu rope was female, the role of women in the high culture, especially the Latin based academic culture and humanist movement of the period, was very limited, a generalization which is… …
9Women — Although women have been involved in French cinema from the beginning, they have, as in the case of other national film industries, had a great deal more difficulty than their male counterparts in establishing themselves, whether as directors …
10Women — Although women have been involved in French cinema from the beginning, they have, as in the case of other national film industries, had a great deal more difficulty than their male counterparts in establishing themselves, whether as directors …