Noun
A Hebrew woman.
Source: Webster's dictionaryHe flees to London, where he gets mixed up with a prostitute, and then with a kindly Jewess who offers him sexual comfort as well as board and lodging. Source: Internet
His son had married a Jewess and thus he feared that his grandchildren, whom he loved above all else, would be excluded as scum from the schools; his earlier operas tainted through the half-Jew Hugo von Hofmannstahl; his publisher was a Jew. Source: Internet
Investigating what ostensibly seems to be a racist murder of an elderly Jewess, Gold is gradually drawn into a mysterious covert conflict between neo-Nazis and Israeli secret agents. Source: Internet
The first alchemist is recognized as being Mary the Jewess (c. 200 A.D.). citation Mary is known for a number of improvements on alchemy equipment and tools as well as novel techniques in chemistry. Source: Internet
Zosimos of Panopolis wrote the oldest known books on alchemy, while Mary the Jewess is credited as being the first non-fictitious Western alchemist. Source: Internet
The Judia ("Jewess", for the ancestry of its owner Fernão de Loronha Bernardo Gomes de Brito. Source: Internet