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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a lass" is correct and usable in written English.
It is typically used to refer to a young girl or woman, often in a casual or affectionate manner, and is more common in certain dialects, particularly Scottish or Northern English.
Example: "The lass at the café served the best coffee in town."
Alternatives: "a girl" or "a young woman".
Exact(48)
This Little Light of Mine 2. Old Joe Clark 3. Going Across The Mountain 4. Praties Grow Small 5. Step By Step 6. Greensleeves 7. I Once Loved A Lass 8. Queen Anne Front 9. A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall 10.
Alas, a lass.
Where eventually he met a lass.
When I was a lass in my teens,.
Now boast thee, death, in thy possession lies a lass uparallel'd.
Cleopatra is "a lass unparallel'd" who is "cunning past man's thought".
Similar(11)
7 Growth was measured using standardised equipment, including the Leicester height measure, standard weighing scales (Salter, model 918) and a Lass-o tape measure for head and arm circumference, and referred to UK Child Growth Foundation Standards 12 or WHO standards for mid upper arm circumference.
He got slapped in the puss, Up the back of a bus, When he asked a young lass for a footer.
As he read a 1795 Burns song, "There Was a Bonie Lass," about a romance interrupted by war, she cried.
A country lass with an idea for an iOS app is ensnared by a co-working space's devious six-month contract.
"A buxom lass in a skimpy bathing suit looked a lot better than an aircraft in another group, Hell's Angels," Mr. Cash said.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com