(n.) A girl or woman who attends the customers of a bar, as in a tavern or beershop.
Example Sentences:
(1) The solution is for Hathaway to spend a year in sarky Manchester, where her attempts to go jogging will be thwarted by 324 days of rain, and if she so much as thinks about telling a Mancunian barmaid that she has poured those lagers fantastically well, she will swiftly learn an aloofness not taught in any American drama school.
(2) The barmaid asked him to repeat his request, which he did.
(3) Seropositivity to both HIV and Treponema pallidum tended to be higher among females, especially the barmaids.
(4) Where a million starlets, waitresses, publicists and barmaids were sprawled around the hot tub.
(5) Among the barmaids the seropositivity rate was higher in younger women (45%) than in middle-aged women (11%).
(6) Alfie, the current landlord, in any case, only has eyes for Kat, his barmaid.
(7) Females, and specifically barmaids, were more likely to be condom users but were less likely to have changed their behavior in other respects.
(8) The barmaids talk about him fondly, like a favourite uncle.
(9) Seroprevalence is as high as 76% (among barmaids in Uganda), and at least half of the spouses of seropositive persons are infected.
(10) The following rates of seropositivity were recorded: barmaids (n=185), 67.7%; lorry drivers and turnboys (n=74), 32%; male blood donors (n=1370), 15%; female blood donors (n=214), 21%; sexual contacts of patients with AIDS (n=14), 71%; social contacts of AIDS patients (n=100), 2%; rural inhabitants of Mukono (n=289), 4.8%; rural inhabitants of West Nile (n=71), 1.4%; old people (n+96), 0%; and children (n=131), 0%.
(11) Many of the associations found were consistent with those that have been described for men, with high mortality ratios for cirrhosis in barmaids and publicans, for suicide in the medical and allied professions, and for respiratory disease in textile workers.
(12) barmaids and erotic massage therapists) known to work in many North American centres.
(13) Since barmaids and waitresses in public houses in Dar es Salaam often engage in prostitution, it is felt that to effect a reduction of numbers of their sexual partners, there is a need to address the social and economic factors underlying high-risk sexual behavior.
(14) Unlike the publicans, landlords, barmaids, barmen, sommeliers, wine waiters, even the mixologists, who kindly make us drunk.
(15) She then played the grotesque beautician Linda in Davis's strange but compelling Nighty Night before crossing over to the mainstream as Myfanwy in Little Britain, the barmaid burdened with endlessly telling Matt Lucas's Daffyd that he's not the only gay in the village.
(16) Farage wore the look of a man ground down by repetition; a man who knew that every aside, every waggled eyebrow, every non-joke that sounded like a joke because it was inexplicably delivered in a jokey see-saw cadence, would be greeted by the Ukip faithful with the same graceless “weeeeey” noise that daytime drinkers make in crap pubs whenever the barmaid drops a glass.
(17) "I stand in the playground and all I hear is Polish," said the 27-year-old barmaid, who has lived in Lincolnshire her whole life.
(18) A conversation with the barmaid and two emails later PDV became the home of the Secret Comedians (2012-15) and my late-night go to.
(19) It's now soapland law that any young, attractive woman enjoying a spot of illicit rumpo must be destroyed, so the bombshell of a barmaid met a grisly end.
(20) The official communique would lead you to believe that Spain was not discussed at all which is interesting because the Spanish economy minister Luis de Guindos said that “…there was a positive evaluation of Spain’s economic policy and the need to carry out a fiscal adjustment that is sensitive, sensible to the economic situation in the country.” So it appears that he discussed the situation with someone, although he did say this took place on Monday evening so maybe he was leaning against a bar somewhere having a quiet drink whilst unloading his woes on the bored barmaid.
Bartender
Definition:
(n.) A barkeeper.
Example Sentences:
(1) Hardy headlines as an ex-con named Bob Saginowski who is trying to live out a quiet life away from crime as a bartender.
(2) Drinks at Jade Bar are in keeping with the spa setting: fruity and herbaceous “muddles” (alcoholic or not) are a speciality, and the bartenders host mixology sessions on Sundays, or by appointment.
(3) Because in Italy, where the word originates, it means just "bartender", fresh coffee being available at most Italian bars, as alcohol generally is in French cafes.
(4) Given the jolly atmosphere of the holidays, the bartender allowed a dog owner to bring in their animal.
(5) He heads back to the Columbia , the rock-star haunt that's the British version of the Chelsea Hotel, where friends and road crew and fellow traveling Northwesterners Sleater-Kinney are lining up at the bar, ordering drinks, and when the bartender of this private club room explains that they have to be staying at the hotel to order a drink, every one of them says the same thing: Their friend Elliott is the man, Elliott is coming soon, Elliott really, really is staying at the hotel.
(6) Jobs whose incumbents have especially high blood pressures include bartenders and dry cleaning operatives.
(7) For a bit of a performance, order a Trailblazer (tequila, vanilla, orange and chocolate) and watch award-winning Aussie bartender Nick literally play with fire.
(8) • Calle de la Palma 76, no website Sala de Despiece Sala de Despiece The ceiling is a jigsaw of polystyrene fish crates; meat hooks dangle above your head; the bartenders dress as butchers and the menu is a delivery slip.
(9) We can’t afford another four years like the last seven.” The emphasis on Clinton marked something of a departure from Rubio’s stump speech over the last year, which has been based on national security and his personal story as the son of Cuban immigrants who worked as a bartender and a maid.
(10) One of Mr Cameron's influences is David Brooks , a rightwing American columnist, who advocates "a party of community and civic order" that replicates "the gatherings at the local barber shop and the church social, the gossip with the cop and the bartender".
(11) In many ways, Quebec’s 2011 “orange wave”, named after the party’s trademark colour, was a fluke – an unexpected wave of success that swept a host of NDP paper candidates to parliament, including university students and a bartender who vacationed in Las Vegas during the campaign.
(12) One of the artists, Dagoberto Rodríguez Sánchez, explains that the panopticon-shaped space, called Güiro, was inspired by the interior of a notorious Cuban jail – only here the jailer is a bartender and the prisoners are the drinkers.
(13) On Saturday Night Live’s recent season premiere, Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton appeared in a sketch as a bartender, opposite cast member Kate McKinnon, who impersonated the American politician.
(14) You had to convince somebody’s grandparents to mud-wrestle and get a picture of a Star Wars stormtrooper working as a bartender in a New York bar.” Reilly liked tasks that required creativity: no one would actually launch a bus into a volcano (presumably), so his team built a miniature version.
(15) But the people who Labour was set up to represent are mostly shut out, except perhaps for the catering staff, bartenders and hotel cleaners.
(16) My friends and I ran out when the fighting started and then we picked up rocks and started hurling them at the bar Fredd E Tree, bartender The mafia, Tree said, ran New York’s gay bars.
(17) Rubio has centered much of his candidacy on his personal story, invoking his humble beginnings as the son of a bartender and a maid to make an optimistic case about restoring the American dream.
(18) The group Women Who Whiskey , which boasts chapters around the US as well as internationally in Nairobi, Geneva and Toronto, was separately mentioned unprompted by all the bartenders to whom I spoke.
(19) Her show conjures Saturday nights out in Blackpool, name-drops Cannon and Ball, and stars bartenders who think rioja is a girl's name.
(20) Standing 11 months ago in the building that once served as the landing place for millions of refugees fleeing Cuba in the 1960s, Rubio entered the race with the tale of his parents’ humble background as a bartender and a maid.