schoolma'am
Noun: A female schoolteacher, particularly in a small or rural school, often with connotations of being strict, traditional, or prim in manner.
The word "schoolma'am" is used to refer to a woman who teaches in a school. It is an old-fashioned term that evokes a specific historical image, often of a teacher in a one-room schoolhouse. It carries nuances of strictness, propriety, and a no-nonsense attitude toward education and discipline.
- The children were both respectful and slightly afraid of the stern schoolma'am.
- In many pioneer stories, the young schoolma'am boards with a local family.
- Her demeanor was so proper that her friends jokingly called her a schoolma'am.
- The term is often used in historical contexts or in literature to quickly establish a character type.
- It can be used figuratively to describe any woman who is perceived as being overly strict, moralistic, or old-fashioned in her views.
- "Don't be such a schoolma'am about the rules; we can be flexible this once."
- Schoolmarm (noun): This is a common variant with identical meaning and connotations. ("The town's old schoolmarm remembered every student she ever taught.")
- Schoolteacher (noun): The modern, neutral term for a person who teaches in a school, without the specific historical or character connotations of "schoolma'am."
- Instructress (archaic)
- Governess (specifically for in-home teaching)
- Pedagogue (formal, can be gender-neutral or female)
While there are no direct phrasal verbs, the concept contributes to cultural idioms about strict teaching: - To rule with a rod of iron: To govern very strictly. (This phrase could describe the manner of a stereotypical schoolma'am.) - The three R's: Reading, wRiting, and aRithmetic, the basic curriculum historically associated with such teachers.
- a woman schoolteacher (especially one regarded as strict)