maam
- Polite yes or no follower
- Polite address with an apostrophe
- Polite address to a lady
- Polite address for a woman
- Polite "yes" or "no" follower
- Feminine salutation
- Elided address
- Courteous contraction
- Counterpart of 'Sir'
- Address with an apostrophe
- Address to an elderly lady
- "My dear woman"
- 'Just the facts, --'
- Word used by a Southern gentleman when exiting the fair lady's company
- Word of address to a queen
- Word of address to a lady
- Word from a hat tipper, perhaps
- What one may call a queen
- What cowboys call women
- What a private might call a major
- Way to address the Queen
- Title with an apostrophe
- The 'm' of 'yes'm'
- Term of address that might be accompanied by a hat tip
- Term of address for a queen
- Term like "my dear lady"
- Southern lady's address
- Sir's equal in deference
- Sir's analog
- Shortened title
- Royal term of address
- Respectful way to address a woman
- Respectful term for a woman
- Respectful address to a woman
- Respectful address to a lady
- Respectful (at times) term of address
- Polite word used by nice young men
- Polite word to a woman
- Polite way to refer to a woman
- Polite way to address a lady
- Polite term used by Columbo
- Polite contraction
- Polite address, for short
- Polite address, briefly
- Polite address to a woman
- Palindromic respectful address
- Palindromic politesse
- Palindromic politeness
- Palindrome with an apostrophe in the middle
- One way to properly address Queen Elizabeth
- One way to address a lady
- Oater title
- Matron, to a maitre d'
- Madame, with a drawl
- Langston Hughes' "Thank You, ___"
- LadyĆ's title
- Lady's salutation
- It might be said while doffing one's hat
- Hat-tipper's comment
- Hat doffer's address
- Gentlewoman kin
- Folksy address
- Feminine address
- Dixie elision
- Contracted address for a lady
- Contracted address
- Condensed address?
- Certain word of respect
- Certain term of respect
- Bit of politeness from a hat-tipper
- Alternative to "sir"
- Address to English queen
- Address often heard in Netflix's "The Crown"
- Address from a hat-tipper
- Address for a Southern belle
- A polite address
- "Yes ___"
- "Wham, bam, thank you, ___"
- "Today I Am a ___" (Valerie Harper book)
- "Sir" alternative
- "No, ___" (polite response to a woman)
- "Milady," more modernly
- "Just the facts" follower
- "Just the facts, ___!"
- "Just the facts, ___ . . ."
- "Howdy, ___" (cowboy's greeeting to a woman)
- "Dear lady" alternative
- "Dear lady"
- "After you, ___"
- ''Just the facts, __''
- ''Just the facts, ___''
- Polite address for a lady
- Palindromic term of address
- "Yes, _____!"
- Polite form of address
- Address for a lady
- "Yes, ___" (polite response to a woman)
- "Thank you, ___!"
- "Yes, ___!"
- Sir's partner
- What a cowboy calls a lady
- What to call a lady
- Sir's counterpart, informally
- Word for a lady
- Term of politeness
- Thank-you-___ (road bump)
- Hat-tipper's word of address
- Miss alternative
- Word with yes, no or thank you
- Miss, eventually?
- Friday addressee?
- "Just the facts, ___" ("Dragnet" catchphrase)
- Word said with a tip o' the hat
- Woman, to a waiter
- Palindromic title
- "My dear lady"
- Word said while tipping one's hat
- Sir's complement
- Term of address from a hat-tipper
- Term of address for a lady
- Title with an apostrophe in the middle
- "Yes, ___" (gent's reply)
- The "m" of "yes'm"
- Cowboy-to-lady address
- "Thank you, ___"
- Hat-tipping word
- Title, for short
- Thank-you-___ (bump)
- Thank-you-___ (bump in a road)
- Webb address?
- Elizabeth II, to Thatcher
- Term of respect for a woman
- Contraction after "yes"
- Polite term of address
- Sir's opposite
- Salutation to a queen
- Palindromic contraction
- Servant's word
- Contraction used by servants and children
- Servant's contraction
- Victoria, to Disraeli
- Contraction often used by servants
- Form of address
- Queenly address
- Address to a queen
- Royal form of address
- Title of respect
- Royal address
- Respectful address with an apostrophe
- Respectful title
- Palindromic address with an apostrophe
- Polite title
- Sir counterpart
- Palindromic form of address
- Domestic's word
- Word of respect to a lady
- Sir's companion
- Polite palindromic address
- Word of respect to a woman
- Title for a lady
- Address with a letter missing?
- Address for the queen
- Woman's address?
- Queen's address
- Address to a lady
- "May I help you, ___?"
- What cowboys call ladies
- Term of respect for women
- Southern lady's salutation, stereotypically
- Respectful term of address
- Polite greeting
- Miss, when older
- Lady's address?
- Hat-tipping address
- Hat-tipper's address
- Hat tipper's word
- Address for a woman
- Address for a queen
- ''Just the facts'' follower
- Word to a lady
- What Charlie Brown calls his teacher
- Repairman-to-housewife address
Usage examples of "maam".
Bless you, maam, theres all sorts of bonds between all sorts of people.
But even then, maam, why should we be held together when thats all over--when the girls are married and the boys out in the world and in business for themselves?
Outside of the village of Maam Cross, less than a dozen people knew about her condition and few of them paid it much heed.
Sat at the top of his bulging bag: a nineteen-page deposition on his meeting with fourteen-year-old Colleen Galaher in Maam Cross.
Irish village of Maam Cross were shining through a misty curtain of gentle rain.
ROSETTI HAD ARRIVED in Maam Cross, and still the dreaded, damnable Voice was constantly with him, trying to distract him from the end of his mission, trying to drive him insane.
There was no way to connect the plagues and sickness and famines to events occurring in Rome and Maam Cross, Ireland, but all my instincts told me there had to be a link, and that we would soon know what it was.
She wandered through the deep heather of the Maam to where the great woods began that dipped to the Raden glen.
The stickies will have killed them all by now, maam, said Roges, even the one we saw on the root wall above Bottommost & The Bridgers from Bottommost were driving it down into the chasm with torches when we came that way.
Maam, I dont believe for a minute that this is a simple courtesy call.
There was no way to connect the plagues and sickness and famines to events occurring in Rome and Maam Cross, Ireland, but all my instincts told me there had to be a link, and that we would soon know what it was.
As if that were not to be enough for anyone but little headway, if any, was made in solving the wasnottobe crime cunundrum when a child of Maam, Festy King, of a family long and honourably associated with the tar and feather industries, who gave an address in old plomansch Mayo of the Saxons in the heart of a foulfamed potheen district, was subsequently haled up at the Old Bailey on the calends of Mars, under an incompatibly framed indictment of both the counts (from each equinoxious points of view, the one fellow's fetch being the other follow's person) that is to see, flying cushats out of his ouveralls and making fesses immodst his forces on the field.