MISOGYNY
Posted: Wed Apr 02, 2008 12:06 am
• misogyny •
Pronunciation: mis-ah-jê-ni • Hear it!
Part of Speech: Noun, mass
Meaning: Hatred of women.
Notes: Today's word (I hesitate to call it a Good one) is a pair with misandry "hatred of men". For those of us who hate both sexes, English allows us misanthropy to refer to a hatred of all mankind. Be careful not to confuse misanthropy with misandry. A misogynous person infected with misogyny is a misogynist.
In Play: Today's word is very topical given the Democratic candidates in the current US presidential race: "Hillary Clinton's candidacy in the 2008 presidential elections may test the misogyny in US society." Senator Clinton's popularity suggests that it has abated in the new millennium but it still rears its ugsome head now and again: "I think it is less Seymour's shyness than it is his misogyny that keeps him a prisoner of bachelorhood."
Word History: Today's word was borrowed from Greek misogynia based on misos "hatred" + gyne "woman". Gyne also appears in gynecology and is related to Old English cwene which, at various points in its career meant "woman", "wife", and "prostitute"—today's quean. It also shares a source with Old English cween "woman, wife, queen", today's queen. The Greek root is also related to the root gen- "give birth", which we find in generate, gene and oxygen. In Gaelic, for some reason, this root became bean [bayn] in the phrase bean sídhe "woman of the fairies", a phrase that English converted into a single word, banshee. (We love Jackie Strauss and Bob Scala and feel nary a drop of misogyny or misandry toward them for suggesting today's Good Word.)
Pronunciation: mis-ah-jê-ni • Hear it!
Part of Speech: Noun, mass
Meaning: Hatred of women.
Notes: Today's word (I hesitate to call it a Good one) is a pair with misandry "hatred of men". For those of us who hate both sexes, English allows us misanthropy to refer to a hatred of all mankind. Be careful not to confuse misanthropy with misandry. A misogynous person infected with misogyny is a misogynist.
In Play: Today's word is very topical given the Democratic candidates in the current US presidential race: "Hillary Clinton's candidacy in the 2008 presidential elections may test the misogyny in US society." Senator Clinton's popularity suggests that it has abated in the new millennium but it still rears its ugsome head now and again: "I think it is less Seymour's shyness than it is his misogyny that keeps him a prisoner of bachelorhood."
Word History: Today's word was borrowed from Greek misogynia based on misos "hatred" + gyne "woman". Gyne also appears in gynecology and is related to Old English cwene which, at various points in its career meant "woman", "wife", and "prostitute"—today's quean. It also shares a source with Old English cween "woman, wife, queen", today's queen. The Greek root is also related to the root gen- "give birth", which we find in generate, gene and oxygen. In Gaelic, for some reason, this root became bean [bayn] in the phrase bean sídhe "woman of the fairies", a phrase that English converted into a single word, banshee. (We love Jackie Strauss and Bob Scala and feel nary a drop of misogyny or misandry toward them for suggesting today's Good Word.)