| 释义 | 
		Definition of Everywoman in English: Everywomannoun ˈɛvrɪwʊmənˈɛvriˌwʊmən An ordinary or typical woman. 普通女人,典型女人  Lorna is rich and privileged, hardly Everywoman 洛娜既有钱又有特权,几乎称不上是普通女人。 Example sentencesExamples -  Elizabeth, who laughingly calls herself the ‘un-Barbie,’ can and probably will be portrayed as a modern-day everywoman.
 -  She said her main characters, a zoo-keeper and a clothes maker, represented the urban everywoman rather than the artsy vanguard stereotypically associated with gay lifestyles.
 -  Lady Liberty, by contrast, is a mythic female approximating a goddess - at one and the same time everywoman and no woman - who has come to embody cardinal virtues of the state.
 -  As in a good Hitchcock movie, Joanna is our everywoman in a small, safe town.
 -  They want to see their saintly everywoman enjoying a chat with a girlfriend, since they derive pleasure from their interactions on the mailing list.
 -  This is much more sophisticated than your average slacker comedy, as it features, for a change, a female protagonist, the ambiguously named everywoman, She.
 -  But just as it may have to shift its ground, there's a feeling that perhaps she has to look for a more singular, less chameleon-like direction rather than the everywoman she's so good at.
 -  Like Heidegger's archetype of the human as a being who simply ‘exists,’ with no direction or motivation, Malick's American everymen and everywomen drift from scene to scene, through non-linear plots and rich landscapes.
 -  She assembles familiar ingredients in a way that satisfies the everywoman while dispiriting the adventurous.
 -  In one work arranged in three registers, 23 small photos of the artist in front of a plain backdrop plot Sherman's metamorphosis from dour everywoman to glamorous, heavily made-up party girl.
 -  Lisa is an omnipotent everywoman who handles each challenge with aplomb, spirit, and bouts of tearful anger.
 -  She's an everywoman with her insecurities and self discoveries she makes to empower herself.
 
 
 OriginEarly 20th century: on the pattern of Everyman.    Definition of Everywoman in US English: Everywomannounˈevrēˌwo͝omənˈɛvriˌwʊmən An ordinary or typical woman. 普通女人,典型女人  the book is a compilation of memorably silly moments in the life of a hapless Everywoman Example sentencesExamples -  As in a good Hitchcock movie, Joanna is our everywoman in a small, safe town.
 -  Elizabeth, who laughingly calls herself the ‘un-Barbie,’ can and probably will be portrayed as a modern-day everywoman.
 -  She said her main characters, a zoo-keeper and a clothes maker, represented the urban everywoman rather than the artsy vanguard stereotypically associated with gay lifestyles.
 -  She assembles familiar ingredients in a way that satisfies the everywoman while dispiriting the adventurous.
 -  Like Heidegger's archetype of the human as a being who simply ‘exists,’ with no direction or motivation, Malick's American everymen and everywomen drift from scene to scene, through non-linear plots and rich landscapes.
 -  But just as it may have to shift its ground, there's a feeling that perhaps she has to look for a more singular, less chameleon-like direction rather than the everywoman she's so good at.
 -  This is much more sophisticated than your average slacker comedy, as it features, for a change, a female protagonist, the ambiguously named everywoman, She.
 -  They want to see their saintly everywoman enjoying a chat with a girlfriend, since they derive pleasure from their interactions on the mailing list.
 -  In one work arranged in three registers, 23 small photos of the artist in front of a plain backdrop plot Sherman's metamorphosis from dour everywoman to glamorous, heavily made-up party girl.
 -  Lisa is an omnipotent everywoman who handles each challenge with aplomb, spirit, and bouts of tearful anger.
 -  She's an everywoman with her insecurities and self discoveries she makes to empower herself.
 -  Lady Liberty, by contrast, is a mythic female approximating a goddess - at one and the same time everywoman and no woman - who has come to embody cardinal virtues of the state.
 
 
 OriginEarly 20th century: on the pattern of Everyman.     |