auntie

See also: Auntie

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

aunt + -ie

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /ˈæn.ti/, /ˈɑːn.ti/
  • (Ghana) IPA(key): /ˈɐn.ti/
  • (file)
  • Rhymes: -ɑːnti, -ænti
  • Homophones: ante, any, anti (in some accents)

Noun

auntie (plural aunties)

  1. Diminutive of aunt
  2. (Asia, Africa) Term of familiarity or respect for a middle-aged or elderly woman.
  3. (Hong Kong) female domestic helper
  4. (LGBT, slang, US) An elderly gay man.[1]

Usage notes

  • In some lects this is the most common spoken form for aunt.
  • In some regions, the spelling aunty is more common.

Synonyms

Derived terms

Descendants

  • Tok Pisin: anti
  • Torres Strait Creole: anti
  • Burmese: အန်တီ (anti)
  • Chinese: 安娣 (āndī)
  • Pennsylvania German: Aendi
  • Scottish Gaelic: antaidh
  • Yoruba: àǹtí

Translations

See also

Verb

auntie (third-person singular simple present aunties, present participle auntying, simple past and past participle auntied)

  1. To be or behave like the aunt of.
    • 1994, Maria Guadalupe Serna-Perez, Entrepreneurship, Women's Roles, and the Domestic Cycle:
      In the same melodrama, Madame Rotschild, a supporting character plays a similar role by "auntying" all children as a rich and powerful woman who can solve most problems in children's own homes.
    • 2003, Richard M. Lerner, Handbook of applied developmental science:
      More and more children are being "auntied" by women in the community who feel it is their duty as mothers to care for parentless children.
    • 2011, Salvatore Scibona, The End, page 72:
      She had had only one unmitigated success in bending the girl to her will over the many years she'd auntied her: She had peeled the dialect right olf Lina's tongue.
    • 2019, Keturah Kendrick, No Thanks: Black, Female, and Living in the Martyr-Free Zone:
      “I am the best auntie of any auntie that has ever auntied,” she'd say, and in doing so reshape herself into the image her community needed to see.

References

  1. A. F. Niemoeller, "A Glossary of Homosexual Slang," Fact 2, no. 1 (Jan-Feb 1965): 25

Anagrams

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