misogyny - Wiktionary, the free dictionary (original) (raw)
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Ancient Greek μισογυνία (misogunía) and μισογύνης (misogúnēs, “woman hater”), from μισέω (miséō, “I hate”) + γυνή (gunḗ, “woman”). By surface analysis, miso- + -gyny.
misogyny (usually uncountable, plural misogynies)
- Hatred of, contempt for, or prejudice against women.
- 1999, Joanne Marie Greer, David O. Moberg, Research in the Social Scientific Study of Religion, →ISBN, page 29:
Although she argues against a simplistic conflation of types of prejudice, she suggests that misogyny is typically present in both narcissistic and obsessive forms of anti-Semitic prejudice. - 1999, Ethel Spector Person, The Sexual Century, →ISBN, page 84:
His misogyny, like that of his predecessors, is more than prejudice; […] - 2001, Jonathan Franzen, The Corrections:
[…] a lonely straight male had no equivalently forgiving Theory of Masculinism to help him out of this bind, this key to all misogynies: […] - 2005, Jeff Johnson, William Inge And The Subversion Of Gender, →ISBN, page 122:
This ontological symbiosis also explains his misogyny. By envying Sue, as the man he cannot become, he projects his self-loathing onto her, trying to diminish what he actually admires. - 2006, Jack Holland, Misogyny: the world's oldest prejudice, →ISBN:
- 2014 April 12, Simon Russell Beale, “Why Shakespeare always says something new: As the 450th anniversary of Shakespeare's birth approaches, the great Shakespearean actor Simon Russell Beale explains his secrets [print version: The king and I]”, in The Daily Telegraph (Review)[1], London, page R7:
[…] I have always found it hard that Hamlet, a character that I love and admire, is guilty of a puerile misogyny and, perhaps, more worryingly, of the unnecessary deaths of his old friends from university, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern. When I played him, I could find reasons for the misogyny but half-ignored the murders.
- 1999, Joanne Marie Greer, David O. Moberg, Research in the Social Scientific Study of Religion, →ISBN, page 29:
A related concept is gynophobia, the fear of women (or femininity), but not necessarily hatred of them.
philogyny (love of, or fondness for, women)
misandry (hatred of men)
hatred or contempt for women
Albanian: mizogjini f
Arabic: كُرْه النِّسَاء m (kurh an-nisāʔ)
Armenian: կնատյացություն (knatyacʻutʻyun)
Belarusian: жанчынаненаві́сніцтва n (žančynanjenavísnictva), жананяна́вісць f (žananjanáviscʹ), мізагіні́я f (mizahiníja)
Bulgarian: женомра́зие n (ženomrázie), мизоги́ния f (mizogínija)
Chinese:
Mandarin: 女性貶抑 / 女性贬抑 (nǚxìng biǎnyì), 厭女 / 厌女 (zh) (yànnǚ), 仇女 (zh) (chóunǚ)Czech: misogynství n, nenávist k ženám f, misogynie (cs) f
Dutch: misogynie (nl), vrouwenhaat (nl) m
Esperanto: mizogineco
Estonian: misogüünia, naistevihkamine
Galician: misoxinia f
Georgian: ქალთმოძულეობა (kaltmoʒuleoba), მიზოგინია (mizoginia)
German: Frauenhass (de) m, Frauenfeindlichkeit (de) f, Misogynie (de) f, Weiberhass m
Greek: μισογυνία (el) f (misogynía), μισογυνισμός (el) m (misogynismós)
Ancient: μισογυνία f (misogunía)Hawaiian: hoʻokae wahine
Hebrew: מִיזוֹגִינְיָה (he) f (misoginia)
Hindi: स्त्रीद्वेष m (strīdveṣ), स्त्री द्वेष m (strī dveṣ)
Hungarian: nőgyűlölet (hu), mizogínia (hu)
Icelandic: kvenhatur n
Japanese: 女嫌い (おんなぎらい, onnagirai), ミソジニー (ja) (misojinī), 女性嫌悪 (じょせいけんお, josei ken'o)
Korean: 여성혐오(女性嫌惡) (yeoseonghyeomo)
Latvian: misogīnija f
Lithuanian: mizoginija f
Macedonian: женомра́зие n (ženomrázie), мизоги́нија f (mizogínija)
Malay: misogini
Persian: زنستیزی (zan-setizi)
Polish: mizoginia (pl) f, mizoginizm m
Russian: женоненави́стничество (ru) n (ženonenavístničestvo), мизогини́я (ru) f (mizoginíja)
Scottish Gaelic: fuath bhan f
Serbo-Croatian:
Cyrillic: мизоги́нија f
Roman: mizogínija (sh) fSlovene: mizoginija f
Turkish: kadın düşmanlığı, mizojini
Ukrainian: женоненави́сництво (ženonenavýsnyctvo), жінконенави́сництво n (žinkonenavýsnyctvo), мізогіні́я f (mizohiníja)
Volapük: vomihet