How to Use landlady in a Sentence
landlady
noun-
The landlady told me this is my problem and to work it out.
— Kwame Anthony Appiah, New York Times, 10 Jan. 2023 -
The tea tastes a bit like the landlady smells: herbal, bitter.
— Katy Waldman, The New Yorker, 21 Aug. 2019 -
But Odette, the landlady, is the one who organized the whole thing.
— Megan Stein, Country Living, 17 Dec. 2019 -
David’s landlady has woken up to the fact that the carriage house would fetch a tidy sum if sold.
— Sarah Dunn, New York Times, 1 June 2018 -
My landlady brings me a pot of borscht to help create a sense of normalcy.
— CNN, 18 Feb. 2023 -
Years later, my landlady told me he had been found dead.
— San Diego Union-Tribune, 26 Apr. 2022 -
Yes, the windowpane in my room was broken and the landlady never fixed it.
— Rachel Cusk, Harper's Magazine, 18 Sep. 2023 -
The Pakistani woman had been the only landlady willing to rent to a shook-looking boy who was still in high school.
— Douglas Stuart, The New Yorker, 6 Jan. 2020 -
There are no cattle on the ranch, though my landlady does have several cats.
— Anna Badkhen, Harper’s Magazine , 28 Sep. 2022 -
After hearing no response to numerous calls, the mother raced to the home and the landlady let her inside the home.
— Evan Sernoffsky, SFChronicle.com, 11 Dec. 2019 -
Even Carol Matthews, the landlady, couldn't stand the commotion.
— Meg Kissinger, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, 23 Aug. 2021 -
The Russian native slashed the throat of his landlady, Margaret Egalowski in Gary in 1924.
— Dawn Mitchell, Indianapolis Star, 11 Dec. 2019 -
Sen has considerably more to say about his first landlady in Cambridge than about his first wife.
— Barbara Spindel, The Christian Science Monitor, 24 Jan. 2022 -
He had been taken in by a courageous landlady, Mme Vernet.
— Hermione Lee, The New York Review of Books, 10 Feb. 2022 -
One hand held her important documents; the other clasped the hand of her landlady.
— Mike Baker, New York Times, 30 Sep. 2023 -
Then his landlady’s daughter had a baby at the new hospital in Gardner and Robert met a nurse who had just been hired there – Donna.
— USA TODAY, 4 Feb. 2024 -
The landlady has her own romance going, with kindly fruit seller Herr Schmidt.
— Matthew J. Palm, orlandosentinel.com, 29 Nov. 2021 -
But as doc spoke to those who knew Bundy — his mom, his friends, the ex-landlady, the girlfriends — there was a whole different side to him that nobody knew about and Ted certainly didn’t talk about.
— Stephanie Nolasco, Fox News, 1 Apr. 2023 -
The landlady smiles at this reluctant display of personal growth and gets back to pouring pints.
— Sophie Gilbert, The Atlantic, 8 Oct. 2021 -
Tatlock met Oppenheimer in the spring of 1936, at a party hosted by his landlady, Mary Ellen Washburn.
— Erica Gonzales, ELLE, 21 July 2023 -
There were other suspects in Ms. Berman’s death: her manager, the landlady.
— Charles V. Bagli, New York Times, 3 Mar. 2020 -
Her landlady was planning to list the apartment on Saturday.
— Emily Gould, Curbed, 28 July 2022 -
Her landlady found Schendel’s half-naked body under a mattress in her apartment.
— Justin Ray, Los Angeles Times, 3 Feb. 2022 -
Showing up behind Amaka on the balcony, the landlady lit an English-brand cigarette, leaned against the railings, and peered down.
— Wired, 1 Sep. 2021 -
There, Sabit ran into her Kazakh landlady and her husband.
— David Remnic, The New Yorker, 3 Aug. 2021 -
Yolanda Davis rounds out the cast as the wise and understanding Mrs. Dickson, Esther’s landlady.
— Manuel Mendoza, Dallas News, 16 Mar. 2023 -
Plimpton even reached out to Finch’s spring training contacts: his driver, his landlady.
— Chris Erskinecolumnist, Los Angeles Times, 1 Apr. 2020 -
Williams described Effie as a very lively middle-aged landlady, a widow with a bright red Buick convertible.
— Greg Garrison, AL.com, 26 Mar. 2018 -
The landlady also had wire screens installed behind the spiderweb gates.
— Rachel Aviv, The New Yorker, 30 Apr. 2018 -
Adam’s spurred back into action by the death of Eloise Parker, a retired teacher played by Phylicia Rashad who is his landlady and only friend, and whose life savings are stolen in a phishing scam.
— Vulture, 12 Jan. 2024
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'landlady.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
Last Updated: