Mistress /(?)/

Mis·tress

Mistress

n.
  1. A woman having power, authority, or ownership; a woman who exercises authority, is chief, etc.; the female head of a family, a school, etc.
    The late queen's gentlewoman! a knight's daughter! To be her mistress' mistress!
  2. A woman well skilled in anything, or having the mastery over it.
    A letter desires all young wives to make themselves mistresses of Wingate's Arithmetic.
  3. A woman regarded with love and devotion; she who has command over one's heart; a beloved object; a sweetheart. [Poetic]
  4. A woman filling the place, but without the rights, of a wife; a woman having an ongoing usually exclusive sexual relationship with a man, who may provide her with financial support in return; a concubine; a loose woman with whom one consorts habitually; as, both his wife and his mistress attended his funeral.
  5. A title of courtesy formerly prefixed to the name of a woman, married or unmarried, but now superseded by the contracted forms, Mrs., for a married, and Miss, for an unmarried, woman.
    Now Mistress Gilpin (careful soul).
  6. A married woman; a wife. [Scot.]
    Several of the neighboring mistresses had assembled to witness the event of this memorable evening.
  7. The old name of the jack at bowls.

Phrases & Compounds

To be one's own mistress
to be exempt from control by another person.

Mistress

v. i.
  1. To wait upon a mistress; to be courting. [Obs.]