The larger part of research on women’s representation has addressed substantive and descriptive aspects of representation. We build on this work and extend it by investigating additional, hitherto largely neglected dimensions of women representation. Building on the "Multidimensional Representation" research agenda, we operationalise four additional forms of women representation using the case of the UK's political system with single-member districts: 1) Surrogation: the degree to which female voters and female MPs build representative relationships across constituencies to correct for male dominance in representation; 2) Justification: the degree to which female voters demand, and female MPs use, pluralist as opposed to republican arguments when giving voice to the interests of women; 3) Personalisation: the degree to which female voters demand female MPs to act independently of their party, and female MPs propensity to do so; 4) Responsiveness: the degree to which female voters demand female MPs to react to the threat of electoral sanctions, and female MPs actual reactivity. We derive several hypotheses about women’s representation on these dimensions, pertaining to female voters as well as female MPs. In particular, we highlight how representation on these dimensions is theoretically related to descriptive and substantive representation as well as political ideology (esp. progressivism). Testing these hypotheses with original survey data from the UK 2019 general election and text-as-data approaches on MPs' legislative speeches, we find support for several hypotheses. Our results provide a much richer and comprehensive picture of women’s representation.