The difference between Madam and Pimping
Madam is also verb with the meaning: to address as "madam".
Pimping is also noun with the meaning: the practise of procuring prostitutes.
Pimping is also adjective with the meaning: little or petty.
check bellow for the other definitions of Madam and Pimping
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Madam as a noun (dated, _, in the UK):
Examples:
"Mrs Grey wondered if the outfit she was trying on made her look fat. The sales assistant just said, “It suits you, madam”."
"Later, Mrs Grey was sitting in her favourite tea shop. “Would madam like the usual cream cakes and patisserie with her tea?” the waitress asked."
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Madam as a noun:
The mistress of a household.
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Madam as a noun (colloquial):
A conceited or quarrelsome girl.
Examples:
"Selina kept pushing and shoving during musical chairs. The nursery school teacher said she was a bad-tempered little madam."
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Madam as a noun (slang):
A woman who runs a brothel, particularly one that specializes in finding prostitutes for rich and important clients.
Examples:
"After she grew too old to work as a prostitute, she became a madam."
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Madam as a verb (transitive):
To address as "madam".
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Pimping as an adjective (dated):
Little or petty.
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Pimping as an adjective (obsolete, US, dialect):
puny; sickly
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Pimping as an adjective (slang, African American Vernacular English):
Consisting of or having the qualities of a pimp.
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Pimping as a noun:
The practise of procuring prostitutes.
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Pimping as a noun:
The process of modifying a vehicle (usually a car), predominantly focusing on its appearance and audiovisual system as opposed to performance.
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Pimping as a verb: