- DAMES
- Feminine titles
- Agatha Christie and Margot Fonteyn
- Titled women
- Ladies
- Lords' ladies
- British nobles
- Titled ladies
- Women in pulp fiction, often
- Wives of knights
- Knights' wives
- Women of distinction
- Women, to a hard-boiled detective
- 1934 Dick Powell-Ruby Keeler movie
- Tune from "42nd Street"
- Maggie Smith and Judi Dench
- English titles
- Julie Andrews and Shirley Bassey
- Helen Mirren, Judi Dench, et al.
- 42nd Street song
- British noblewomen
- Jane Goodall and Maggie Smith
- Companions for knights
- Noble ladies
- Knights' ladies
- Knights' women
- Judi Dench et al.
- Knight wives
- Some titled women
- Some royal wedding guests
- Judi Dench and Helen Mirren, for two
- Edith Evans and Edith Sitwell
- Fonteyn et al.
- It introduced "I Only Have Eyes for You"
- Film that introduced "I Only Have Eyes for You"
- Knights' female equivalents
- Judi and Maggie
- Some titled Brits
- Christie and Dench
- Many of Mike Hammer's acquaintances
- Titles for Dench and Lansbury
- Female equivalents of British knights
- Titled British women
- Female equivalents of knights
- Tomatoes
- What ain't we got? We ain't got ____! ("South Pacific" lyric)
- Women of station.
- Women.
- The D in D.B.E.
- Colonial ___.
- Great ladies.
- Ladies of high degree.
- Matrons.
- Care, Fortune, etc.
- Sybil Thorndike and others.
- May Whitty and Myra Hess.
- Subject of song in "South Pacific."
- Wives of baronets.
- Certain British women.
- Colonial ___ of America.
- Mesdames.
- Old-time schoolmistresses.
- Good wives.
- The ladies.
- Titles of respect.
- Housewives, old style.
- Titled ones.
- Relatives of dolls.
- Noble titles.
- Feminine equivalent of "knights."
- Some women.
- Women of rank.
- Fortune and others.
- Women: Slang.
- South Pacific song subject
- Gals
- Nothing like them
- Myra Hess et al.
- Women of consequence
- What ain't we got? in song
- Gals and babes
- Beknighted women
- Sirs' mates
- Singer Janet Baker et al.
- Knights' counterparts
- South Pacific group
- Hess and Christie
- Sutherland and Te Kanawa
- J. Baker and M. Hess
- Ladies' titles
- Scarcity in "South Pacific"
- Distaff knights
- Beknighted females
- Iris Murdoch and others
- Classy ladies
- Kiri Te Kanawa and others
- Damon Runyon characters
- Peggy Ashcroft and others
- French face cards
- Matriarchs
- Skirts
- I Only Have Eyes for You movie musical
- Women who are entitled
- Women, in pulp fiction
- Grand women
- Olivia de Havilland and Olivia Newton-John, for two
- Women of honour
- Some nobility
- Emma Thompson and Anna Wintour, for two
- Shirley Bassey and Agatha Christie, for two
- Shirley Bassey and Angela Lansbury, for two
- 42nd Street number
- Helen Mirren and Judi Dench, for two
- Edith Evans and Agatha Christie
- Evans and Sitwell
- Women, to hard-boiled detectives
- British honorees
- British ladies of society
- Agatha Christie and Judi Dench
- Agatha Christie and Judi Dench, e.g.
- Women, to film noir detectives
- What knights' wives are called
- Distinguished British women
- Helen Mirren and Emma Thompson, e.g.
- Actresses Anderson and Whitty
- Evans and Fonteyn for two
- Hess and Anderson <P>e.g.
- Margot Fonteyn and Agatha Christie
- Women of breeding
- Dolls and molls
- Women, in old detective novels
- Knights' female counterparts
- Magdalene Odundo and Helen Mirren, for two
- Jocelyn Barrow and Judi Dench, e.g.
- Kelly Holmes and Angela Lansbury, e.g.
- 42nd Street tune
- Agatha Christie, et al.
- 1934 musical featuring "I Only Have Eyes for You"
- Knighted women
- Judi Dench and Helen Mirren
- Iris Murdoch and Barbara Cartland
- Judi Dench and Maggie Smith, e.g.
- Some noblewomen
- Penelope Wilton and Maggie Smith
- Helen Mirren and Maggie Smith, for two
- Judi Dench and Maggie Smith, for two
- Julie Andrews and Maggie Smith, for example
- Women, to film noir gumshoes
- Maggie Smith and Helen Mirren, for two
- Agatha Christie and Iris Murdoch, e.g.