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ancestress

American  
[an-ses-tris, -suh-stris] / ˈæn sɛs trɪs, -sə strɪs /

noun

  1. a woman from whom a person is descended.


Gender

What's the difference between ancestress and ancestor? See -ess.

Etymology

Origin of ancestress

First recorded in 1570–80; ancest(o)r + -ess

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.

Alone, save for two attendants, he appeared, once before midnight and once after, at the shrine of his ancestress the Sun Goddess and offered her a sacrifice of holy rice.

From Time Magazine Archive

But there could be no doubt that his pictured ancestress remained as she had for years, at his country home in Guildford, England.

From Time Magazine Archive

Last week she followed her ancestress Sheba to Jerusalem.

From Time Magazine Archive

He had taken to wife the Princess Charlotte of Oldenburg, petite and ravishing as her famed ancestress Queen Louise of Prussia.*

From Time Magazine Archive

I had an ancestress with a long gray tail and eyes as beady as mine, and her name was Katinka Van Tassel.

From "Secrets at Sea" by Richard Peck

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