No, the plural for the noun widow is widows.
The word 'widowed' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun: my widowed sister.
of Widow
The plural of widow is widows.
The word "not-widowed" least describes Widow Douglas.
Widow means a woman who has lost her husband by death and has not remarried. To be widowed is the act of losing your husband.
If you're female - you're a widow. If you're male - you're a widower. You can also use 'widowed' in either case.
There is no compulsion to marry again when someone has been widowed.
It means that a person's spouse (husband or wife) has died. A widow is a woman whose husband has died. Widowed is the adjective form. (A man whose wife dies is a widower.) "Widowed" also can mean one line on a page - it couldn't fit on the page before. It probably derives from the loneliness of the widow.
A widow is addressed as Mrs., unless she provides another preference.
The closest I can come is rhyme with widow, not widowed. Try changing the tense and use kiddo.
Sissy Spacek played in The Raggedy Man (1981), where she is divorced, not widowed.
She was his widow and even though she had been remarried (and once again widowed) as long as she was not married at the time of her death she qualified to be buried with him.
Catherine Parr was actually a widow a total of three times. She had been married twice when she married the infamous King Henry VIII of England in 1543 and she became a widow for the third time when he passed away in January of 1547.