I will assume that you are speaking of the book Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen since you did not mention a title or author. Elizabeth is the most sensible person in her home. Her mother is ignorant and her only concern is to have her daughters married. Lydia is in her own little world so to speak. She has not been taught how to think in an educated manner and has been allwed by her parents to spend her time thinking of nothing else than flirting.
You change it to When my mother shops for her, my sister is pleased
Mother's brother: Mama Father's brother or Mother's sister's husband or Father's sister's husband: Kaka
The compound nouns are sister-in-law and mother-in-law.
Both words mean "aunt": amto is the sister of the father khalto is the sister of the mother
Comes from your mother's vagina.
Yes, Mary I was the sister of Elizabeth I. They had different mothers, but the same father. Mary's mother was Katherine of Aragon, and Elizabeth's mother was Anne Boleyn. Their father was Henry VIII.
nobody she only has a mother and father.
nobody she only has a mother and father.
In most cases, your sister's mother is also your mother, and her husband is your father. If you and your baby sister have the same father but different mothers, your sister's mother's father is your father. If you and you sister have the same mother but different fathers, your baby sister's father is your step-father if he is married to your mother.
If this question is a reference to Elizabeth, mother of John the Baptist and Mary, mother of Jesus, then no, Elizabeth was Mary's cousin. If you mean Queen Elizabeth I and Mary I, yes, they are. They are both Henry VIII's daughters.
The Queen Mother (if you mean the present Queen Elizabeth of England's mother) had two children - the present Queen Elizabeth II and her late sister Princess Margaret.
If you are referring to St. Elizabeth, the mother of John the Baptist, if she had any siblings the information is lost to history.
No. Mary Queen of Scots was the daughter of Elizabeths first cousin, both being descendants of King Henry VII. Elizabeth did have a half-sister Mary, who was Queen Mary I of England (Bloody Mary) and a different person from Mary Queen of Scots.
It is possible that Elizabeth and Anne, Mary's mother, were sisters but there is no way to verify this as no scripture or tradition speaks to it. Also, neither Hebrew nor Aramaic have a word for cousin so Elizabeth could have been any close blood relative of Mary.
Your half-sister's mother may be your mother, if you have different fathers. If you have different mothers and your father is married to your half-sister's mother, then you probably should call her "mother." If your half-sister's mother is not connected to your father (i.e. her father married your mother) then there is no relationship name for you to call her mother, other than "my half-sister's mother."
St Elizabeth, the Blessed Mother's sister, contributed the follwing line,"Blessed is the fruit of Thy womb, Jesus!"
The only woman who has been wife, daughter, sister, niece and mother to English Kings was Elizabeth of York. She was the daughter of Edward IV, niece of Richard III, sister of Edward V, wife of Henry VII, and mother of Henry VIII. Additionally she was the Grandmother of Mary I, Edward VI and Elizabeth I.