no that was just a myth from the second st trinians movie..
The term "lass-lorn" in Shakespeare's works refers to a girl or young woman who is lost or abandoned, typically in the context of love. It conveys a sense of sorrow and longing, often highlighting the emotional turmoil experienced by someone who has been forsaken by a lover. The word evokes themes of unrequited love and the pain of separation, which are prevalent in Shakespeare's exploration of romantic relationships.
The now-archaic term was used by Shakespeare, among others, to mean forsaken by one's mistress, or girlfriend (from lass, and forlorn).
Lass'
Ernesto Lass goes by Lass.
A lass is glass
The song "It Was A Lover and His Lass" appears in the Shakespeare play As You Like It. A contemporary setting by Thomas Morley is possibly the best-known music to accompany the words. Many other settings have been written, including a particularly attractive one by The Barenaked Ladies.
A Lass
Lass is a noun.
Barbara Lass's birth name is Barbara Lass-Kwiatkowska.
It means to be without a woman. The phrase only appears once in Shakespeare, in an unimportant speech in The Tempest, and is part of some side-imagery not even particularly relevant to the speech, as follows: " and thy broom -groves, Whose shadow the dismissed bachelor loves, Being lass-lorn" Apparently bachelors who have been dumped and are without a female companion like broom-grass.
In Welsh llances means 'lass'.
lass = la muchacha