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gertrude

1 American  
[gur-trood] / ˈgɜr trud /

noun

  1. a slip or underdress for infants.


Gertrude 2 American  
[gur-trood] / ˈgɜr trud /

noun

  1. a female given name: from Germanic words meaning “spear” and “strength.”


Etymology

Origin of gertrude

1925–30, special use of Gertrude

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Eliot and Gertrude Stein, now contemplating the 1920s crossword craze, now skipping to its 2020s COVID-prompted renaissance.

From Los Angeles Times

Gertrude Stein, Virginia Woolf and their contemporaries produced wildly different books with one thing in common: the belief that writers needed to break with the old.

From The Wall Street Journal

“I don’t look like that,” Gertrude Stein is supposed to have said to Picasso when he completed his portrait of her in 1906.

From The Wall Street Journal

Virginia depicted herself and her husband Leonard “lying crushed under an immense manuscript of Gertrude Stein’s”—and so, literary modernism’s eccentric pioneer was rejected by its suavest representative.

From The Wall Street Journal

Investors could learn from Gertrude, a lady dedicated to self-preservation, in assessing comments from players in the artificial-intelligence drama.

From Barron's