Lady
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Gaga appeared at Europride, an international event dedicated to LGBT pride, in Rome in June 2011. She criticized the poor state of gay rights in many European countries and described gay people as \"revolutionaries of love\".[392] Later that year, she was referenced by teenager Jamey Rodemeyer in the hours prior to his death, with Rodemeyer having tweeted \"@ladygaga bye mother monster, thank you for all you have done, paws up forever\". Rodemeyer's suicide prompted Gaga to meet with then-President Barack Obama in order to address anti-gay bullying in American schools.[393] In 2011, she was also ordained as a minister by the Universal Life Church Monastery so that she could officiate the wedding of two female friends.[394]
The medial -f- disappeared 14c. The word is not found outside English except where borrowed from it. Sense of \"woman of superior position in society\" is c. 1200; that of \"woman whose manners and sensibilities befit her for high rank in society\" is from 1861 (ladylike suggesting this sense is attested from 1580s, and ladily from c. 1400). Meaning \"woman chosen as an object of chivalrous love\" is from early 14c. Used commonly as an address to any woman since 1890s.
Applied since Old English to the Holy Virgin, hence many extended usages in plant names, place names, etc., from genitive singular hlæfdigan, which in Middle English merged with the nominative, so that lady- often represents (Our) Lady's, as in ladybug. Lady Day (late 13c.) was the festival of the Annunciation of the Virgin Mary (March 25). Ladies' man first recorded 1784; lady-killer \"man supposed to be dangerously fascinating to women\" is from 1811. Lady of pleasure recorded from 1640s. Lady's slipper as a type of orchid is from 1590s.
The Germanic root is of uncertain origin; it is perhaps connected to Old English hlifian \"to raise higher, tower,\" on the notion of the bread rising as it bakes, but (according to OED) it is unclear whether \"loaf\" or \"bread\" is the original sense. Loaf also is disguised in lord and lady. Finnish leipä, Estonian leip, Old Church Slavonic chlebu, Lithuanian klepas probably are Germanic loan words.
Old English dæge \"female servant, woman who handles food in a household, housekeeper,\" from Proto-Germanic *daigjon (source also of Old Norse deigja \"maid, female servant,\" Swedish deja \"dairymaid\"), from PIE root *dheigh- \"to form, build.\" Now obsolete (though OED says, \"Still in living use in parts of Scotland\"), it forms the first element of dairy and the second of lady. 59ce067264