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Showing posts with label Women. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Women. Show all posts

Subject: Words about Women: Understanding Women



(If you have not read the last post Words about Women: Tossing and Turning: Women, Sex, and Power you should read it first)


Alluring: from French,  a "to" and lure "bait." ; "to bait". Falconers (people who hunted with hawks) used  a device called a lure to call back their hawks. It was a long cord with feathers attached.  The lure is what they used to feed their birds, so the birds were conditioned to respond to it. So when you say a women allures a man, or is alluring, what you are really saying she is attracting men through somewhat deceptive means.

Charm: Having to do with witchcraft. If a girl were called charming in the 14th century you could be pretty sure she was going to the bottom of a lake or burned at the stake.  This is an unusual twist- a word that began as something to be abhorred is now something any women would be pleased to be called.  Charm came from the French charme, which came from the Latin carmen, "song," which didn't really mean song but wicked chant or incantation.  Later women wore "charm bracelets" to ward off evil spirits. By the time I was in grade school, 100s of years later, I remember the prettiest and most popular girls had the most "friendship  bracelets" on their wrists.  Today, to be called "Charming" is equally desirable but perhaps there is just a tinge of attractive evil in it.


Enchanting: from Enchant, originally "to chant", or as we already learned witchcraft.  An enchantress was  a women believed to practice magic, but now the term has softened to, "a bewitching and fascinating woman", and enchant means to "win over".  How one gets "won over" in some situations is still a mystery, but it is likely a credit to the woman as opposed to a mark against her.  Off the subject, churches do a lot of singing, which may be a form of incantare, Latin for in "over" and cantare "sing", that is "sing someone over to your side." Singing can apparently go either way: Swing Low Sweet Chariot.


Glamour: to cast a spell over men.  Again before applied to women, this word was quite boring. Actually it is a totally mistake. Glamour is from Latin grammar, "words".  Because through history most people couldn't read and write, written words were regarded with suspicion and were believed to have special powers, or magic.  You see magic spells were long and it was kind of important to get them right so they had to be written down on paper, particularly with such a complicated language as Latin. Apparently one day someone wrote grammar down wrong and it became "glamour" and the rest is history.  If it had anything to do with witchcraft, evil, fear, or something to be regarded with suspiciousness it would eventually be applied to women.


Caprice (my favorite): like a goat.  You can thank Thomas De Quincey for its application to women. I won't even try to paraphrase; lets go to the source;  "Everywhere I observe in the feminine mind something of a beautiful caprice, a floral exuberance of that charming willfulness which characterizes or dear human sisters, I fear through all of the world." When a woman is capricious she is imitating the frisky, playful antics of the male cousin of a sheep.   Yummy but uncatchable?   This reminds me of my friend Carry. I hope she is not reading this.


Bevy: drinking company.  From Latin, bibere meaning "to drink", which became beivre in French, and came into English as beverage, "that which is drunk."  By this path bevy meant a group of drinkers but then changed to signify a small group of birds, or animals. With such cute company, of course it had to be applied to women too, so a bevy became a company of "roes, larks, quails, or ladies."  Ironically we put a "bib" on our babies to catch the moisture that the baby spills.  How cute: little birds, ladies, and the n babies. Bevy = Be VERY careful when drinking with a company of women.

Coquette: from the French coq or literally " barnyard cock".  Think of the amorous strutting rooster all alone in a hen house.  Appropriately, this word originally applied exclusively to men. But men preferred to share this word with women, and coquette became, "a frisking and fliperous minx".  But I guess men can still be called "cocky"- since men are less complicated you can get the point across with less letters.


Bluestocking: a literary woman.  I will spare you the story.  There is absolutely nothing interesting about it. But picture a librarian with long brown hair, black glasses, and long blue stockings on whatever it is she is wearing. Hey, not so bad after all.


Bridal: it is actually the "toast that was drunk".  Bridal is from English bryd, "bride" and ealu "ale" so the bridal means "Brides Ale", which is why people went to weddings in the Middle Ages, and ironically the ale served at the weddings is probably responsible for at least 50% of marriages so the term is proportionally not far off.  However, the brides get the last laugh because groom actually means, "man who takes care of horses".  Why else would a woman marry in the Middle Ages?


Wed: "to marry" but once meant "to wager."  You could weddian a woman or racehorse for an outcome that was "for fairer, or fouler".


Honeymoon: sweet moon?,moon is referring to a time period of roughly a month, so honeymoon means, "the first month after marriage, when there is nothing but tenderness and pleasure."  However, it is believed that there also was a cynical tone to the word because it is well know that as soon as the moon is full it begins to wane.


Buxom: today, "heavy" but originally it was buhsum, deriving from bugan, meaning "bend" or "pliant, pleasant, kindly, obedient," then somehow it transformed to "blithe and gay", then it took a turn towards "full of health and vigor", then at last it mysterious landed on the curves of a woman's figure, so now buxom means, "pleasingly plump".  Again, why do words about women always seem to start out with good intentions and then end up this way?


Avoirdupois or Adipose: are descriptive words usually applied to women as a polite ways to say "overweight or with a little excessive fat".  Avoirdupois is from the French Aveir de peis meaning "goods sold by weight". Adipose is from Latin, adeps and/or adipis, which means "grease or fat"

Harem: actually meant forbidden or sacred and now, well you guessed it, now it is a brothel.  The least sacred place.


Boudoir: a pouting room. Originally it was an elegantly furnished room to which a lady can retire to alone or to receive intimate friends.  Later however, in France a woman was sent to her boudoir to bouder, or "pout". If this is true I figure it had something to do with all of these words men used to describe women.


Amazons: from Greek a "without" and mazos "breast"; "without breast". The Amazons were a mythical group of fighting women said to have cut off their right breasts so they could draw their bows more easily.  The Amazon river was named the Amazon because when an explore named Orellana descended from the Andes to the sea down the river that is now known as the Amazon, he said he engaged in battle by a "savage" tribe in which the women fought beside the men.


Alimony: from Latin alo "nourish" and money "money which  etymologically  is pretty clear; "eating money." Tiger Woods' divorce from Elin Nordegren is estimated at $100 million. If she lived 80 more years and ate 3 meals per day that would give her $87,600 to spend per meal.  That's a whole lot of eating money.

None of these words are terribly complicated. I guess the point I am trying to make is that words change over time, and the reasons are somewhat mysterious but quite interesting when studied in detail.  So I hope this sample* of words relating to women is alluring enough for you to explore the meaning behind words in a little more depth. It can be a lot of fun.

*By the way- it used to be appropriate for a young girl to work up a sampler, or piece of needlework, as a specimen of her skill in embroidery, as an index of her worth in marriage.  A sampler was an example of the work a girl could do.  From Latin exemplum, "example".

For this list of words and history I have to thank Word Origins: and Their Romantic Stories by Funk and everything I know about women to my sister and cousins (for which there are many). Less so girlfriends (for which there were few).


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Subject: Words about Women: Tossing and Turning; Women, Sex, and Power.



Words about Women: Double Standards
What is interesting about words relating to women- or rather, sad, shocking, or telling is to notice how over the course of history most words about women begin as positive but degrade over time to become negative.


"Housewife" means "mistress of a household", but the Old English word "huswif" gradually changed to "hussy" which is now a term of contemptuous reproach.  Along these lines, because of its association with women, even "house" is no longer safe from the invasion of infidelity.  In certain sentences, house means "a house of prostitution," and "bordello" at first mean "a little house" but now is used to designate a "brothel".


"Dame", originally from the Latin "domina", meant "mistress" and was once used to indicate a position of high station. Only one example is necessary to prove this, "Notre Dame."  However, today you will rarely hear the word "dame" used in a positive context.  Same with "madam"- if you say someone is a madam you are more likely to believe she is is the "madam of a house of ill-repute" as you are to think she is the "women of the respectable home".


A "courtesan", at first, was a very decent feminine member of court circles.  A "wench" was a word for child and "tart" was a word of endearment, but all of these have now degenerated into sexual terms that would clearly be offensive if used in public.


"Woman" itself is not even safe.  If you were to say, "she is his woman" that will evoke a very different reaction than saying "she is his wife".  Wilford Funk warns that when using any foreign language "you will find it safer to totally avoid using a word that means girl or woman unless you are sure of all its connotations." So which would you rather be thought of, a seductress vamp or not noticed at all? Really, it is that bad?!  Wow. 


Words about Women: Sex and Power
There are two likely reasons for the corruption of words relating to women and they are not mutually exclusive or simple:  1.) It is thought this is either directly or remotely connected with sex and of course almost all words on the subject of sex lose caste and become taboo in polite society. 2. Until recently, in most societies men have held the position of power and men have seen to it that despite actions either instigated or participated in by themselves, women are seen as the "temptress"; ensuring that the shame of Eve would be fixed upon all of her children in our very vocabulary.


Vocabulary or Language, may very well be either be a creator or creation of power, or if not, at the very least a tool of power- you will find an in depth philosophy on subject backed by numerous examples in the works of Michael Foucault.  


Foucault's works analyze the link between power and knowledge. He outlines a form of covert power that works through people rather than only on them. Foucault claims belief systems gain momentum (and hence power) as more people come to accept the particular views associated with that belief system as common knowledge. Such belief systems are defined by their figures of authority, such as nobility, medical doctors, or priests in a church. Within such a belief system—ideas crystallize as to what is right and what is wrong, what is normal and what is deviant. Within a particular belief system certain views, thoughts or actions become unthinkable. These ideas, being considered undeniable "truths", come to define a particular way of seeing the world, and the particular way of life associated with such "truths" becomes normalized. This subtle form of power lacks rigidity and other discourses can contest it. Indeed, power itself lacks any concrete form, occurring as a locus of struggle In essence, he sought to show how meaning and knowledge is constructed, not absolute, and examined “how we know what we know.” His two major works from the 1960s, Order of Things, address the historico-ontological status of language and, especially in The Archaeology of Knowledge, provide a methodology for approaching the history of thought. His major works in the 1970s, Discipline & Punish: The Birth of the Prisonand  The History of Sexuality, explore the genealogy of power relations.


Words about Women: Tossing and Turning
There is no better example of how struggle changes the meaning of words is how much the meaning of relating to women took place in England when Charles II came to the throne in 1660.  This was the heyday of the double entendre and wholesale immorality by the upper-class and reflected in the theater of that time, while the middle class held stubbornly to the Puritan tenets of Oliver Cromwell's Commonwealth that had gone before. There were double standards relating to the functionally powerful and the powerless, not the least of which is the double standard applied between men and women.  Without positions of actual government authority, sexuality may very well have been a tactic of power that could be perceived as an opportunity or a threat to the powers of some.  Regardless, the tossing and turning of the meaning of words related to women is evidence of Foucault's viewpoint, which is that words have no absolute meaning, only one that is negotiated through struggle.  Not withholding the bedroom.


While there are many movies that convey what I am trying to say with less words and more clarity, the best I have seen in recent memory is the move, The Duchess.



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