A woman with exceptional domestic skills, especially one who excels at cooking and preparing meals.
‘I have no aspirations to be a domestic goddess any more than Nigella does.’
‘My mother was a domestic goddess in every household art except culinary.’
‘I'm turning into quite the domestic goddess.’
‘She might seem bulletproof on screen, but even domestic goddesses need a little downtime.’
‘She earned her chops as the domestic goddess for women from Connecticut.’
‘Okay, so my career as a domestic goddess didn't get off to such an auspicious start.’
‘I'm quite proud of myself as, believe it or not, I am cooking like a domestic goddess.’
‘Nigella's self-confessed trick, after all, is based not upon actually being a domestic goddess but on faking the image of one.’
‘I warned you when you moved in that I'm no domestic goddess.’
‘Anyone familiar with my previous ham-fisted attempts to establish myself as a domestic goddess will find this new urge more laughable than laudable.’
‘Sadly, the result could be a kitchen so demandingly hi-tech it provokes even domestic goddesses to kick holes in stained glass windows.’
‘It was a wonderful, wonderful soup, and I truly felt like a domestic goddess when I served it up.’
‘And since Nigella Lawson made it fashionable, anything that pushes up your stakes in the domestic goddess department is A Good Thing.’
‘Somehow, though, my big mouth has invited him over to my place for a romantic candlelit dinner - he thinks I'm some kind of domestic goddess.’
‘Just because Mom is out at the moment doesn't mean I have to play domestic goddess.’
‘I was a domestic goddess way before Nigella Lawson.’
‘The term 'Stepford Wife' became such an embodiment of a new generation of 1950s woman - the glamorous domestic goddess - that it found its way into the vernacular.’
‘My Mum is a domestic goddess, although I would submit that the phrase is an oxymoron.’
Are You Learning English? Here Are Our Top English Tips