1. lettice - Noun
2. Lettice - Proper noun
Lettice
(dated) A female given name from Latin.
lettice (uncountable)
(historical) A kind of whitish-grey fur from the winter coat of the least weasel.
lettice (countable and uncountable, plural lettices)
Obsolete spelling of lettuce; however, more often a misspelling of lettuce.
Adams 2002 p. 149; Gristwood 2007 p. 340 Countess Lettice was also buried there when she died in 1634, alongside the "best and dearest of husbands", as the epitaph, which she commissioned, says. Source: Internet
Lettice was the daughter of Katherine Carey, the daughter of “the other Boleyn girl,” Mary. Source: Internet
Owen 1980 p. 44; Jenkins 2002 pp. 263, 305 In 1583 she informed ambassadors that Lettice Dudley was "a she-wolf" and her husband a "traitor" and "a cuckold". Source: Internet
The figures in the garden may include representations of Robert and Lettice Dudley. Source: Internet
Walter’s campaigns left Lettice in grave debt, but after his death, Lettice secretly married Queen Elizabeth’s longtime favorite suitor, Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester, and all hell’s fury erupted. Source: Internet