- AUNTS
- Mame and Jemima
- Mother's sisters
- Mame and Em
- Polly and Eller
- They might have mom bobs
- Some wedding invitees
- Some kin
- Some of the kinfolk
- Cousins' moms
- Kinswomen
- Bee and Em, e.g.
- Some of them are great
- Godmothers, often
- There's an "infestation" of them in a 2020 Geico ad
- Bee and Polly, e.g.
- Mom's sisses
- Family reunion attendees
- Bee and Em
- Females at family reunions
- Patty and Selma, to Bart Simpson
- Women with nieces
- Some sisters
- Ma's sisters
- Em and Bee
- Hilda and Zelda, to TV's Sabrina
- Eller and Em
- Mame, et al.
- Some family reunion attenders
- Patty and Selma, to Bart
- Some female relatives
- Literature's Em and Polly
- Women in the family
- Family members
- Family tree members
- Cousins' mothers
- Wedding attendees
- Holiday visitors
- Reunion attendees
- Uncles' mates
- Eunice and Jean, to Caroline
- Pittypat and Polly
- Abby and Martha, to Mortimer, in "Arsenic and Old Lace"
- Many godmothers
- Mom's sisters
- Some matriarchs
- Some wedding guests
- Some godmothers
- Bee and Pittypat
- Granny's girls
- Parent's sisters
- Reunion attenders
- Em, Bee and Polly
- Dad's sisters
- Some kinfolk
- The perpetrators in "Arsenic and Old Lace"
- Shower organizers, maybe
- Some babysitters
- Some reunion guests
- Uncles' spouses
- Many sisters
- Some unpaid babysitters
- Mom's sisters, to you
- Reunion contingent
- Some maidens
- What many sisters are
- Tías, aquí
- Some reunion attendees
- Bee, Em, and others
- Tantes, ici
- Volunteer babysitters, maybe
- Cousin carriers
- La Toya and Janet, to Blanket
- Relatives.
- Female relatives.
- Kinfolk.
- Part of a chorus in "Pinafore."
- Parental relatives.
- Last word of the "Pinafore" song, "I Am the Monarch of the Sea."
- Last word of "I Am the Monarch of the Sea."
- Chloe and Polly.
- Chloe and others.
- Potential baby sitters.
- Mame and Polly
- Rhody and Eller
- Favorite hangouts
- Baby sitters, at times
- Kin in a G. & S. line
- Mame and Minnie
- Relations
- Polly and Chloe
- Polly and Pittypat
- Em et al.
- Tia and tante
- . . . his cousins and his ___!: Gilbert
- Chloe and Pittypat
- Mom's sisters, e.g.
- Polly and Pittypat of fiction
- Reunion goers
- Some female reuners
- Some reunion gatherers
- Fussy relatives, stereotypically
- Stereotypical fussbudgets
- Some doters on babies
- Em and Polly
- Agatha and Dahlia, in P. G. Wodehouse books
- Em and Bee, for two
- Some volunteer baby sitters
- Relatives of nieces
- Clara and Harriet, in 1960s TV
- Em and Bee, e.g.
- Female relations
- Senders of some Christmas gifts
- Uncles' partners
- What sisters often are
- Uncles' wives
- Em and Jemima
- Em and Polly, in literature
- Some next of kin
- Dahlia and Agatha, in the Jeeves novels by P. G. Wodehouse
- Mothers of cousins
- Where I Find My Heaven Gigolo ___
- Baby sitters, sometimes
- Polly and Rhody
- Polly and Rhody, for two
- Cousin providers
- Family circle members
- Some relatives
- My parent's sisters
- Some members of the family
- P.G. Wodehouse's Agatha and Dahlia
- Bertie Wooster's plague
- Wooster's bane
- Moms' former playmates
- Some sibs of Dad, to you
- Cousins' parents
- Dorothy's Em and others
- Father's sisters
- Some parental siblings
- Mame, and the like
- Some of Granny's kids, perhaps
- Women in a tree?
- Your parents' sisters
- Patty and Selma, to Bart and Lisa
- Family females
- Em and Polly of fiction
- Polly and Em of fiction
- Polly and Em of literature
- They might spoil their niblings
- Tias, in English
- Niblings' favorite babysitters, maybe
- Zelda and Hilda, to Sabrina Spellman
- Em, Polly and Rhody
- Polly and Jemima
- Fiction's Em and Polly
- Jemima and Em
- Some reuners
- Some babysitters who are related to the baby
- Hilda and Zelda, to Sabrina
- Doters on daughters, often
- Granny's daughters
- Patty and Selma, to Lisa
- Some of Granddad's kids