Dictionary Definition
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- The condition of being a maiden
- The time during which one is a maiden
- The maidenhead
Translations
condition of being maiden
- Breton: gwerc'hted
- Dutch: maagdelijkheid
- Finnish: neitsyys
- French: virginité
- German: Jungfrauheid
- Scottish Gaelic: òigheachd , maighdeannas
- Welsh: gwyryfdod , morwyndod
time during which one is maiden
- Breton: gwerc'hted
- Dutch: maagdelijkheid
- Finnish: neitsyys
- French: virginité
- German: Jungfrauheid
- Scottish Gaelic: òigheachd , maighdeannas
- Welsh: gwyryfdod , morwyndod
maidenhead
- Finnish: neitsyys, immenkalvo
- Scottish Gaelic: maighdeannas
- Spanish: virginidad
Extensive Definition
A virgin (or maiden) is, originally, a young
woman characterized by absence of sexual experience (see Etymology).
Virginity is the state of being a virgin. The word is also often
used with wider reference by relaxing the age, gender or sexual
criteria. Hence, more mature women can be virgins (The
Virgin Queen), men can be virgins (The
40 Year-Old Virgin), and potential initiates into many fields
can be colloquially termed virgins, for example a skydiving
"virgin". In the last usage, virgin simply means uninitiated. Also
by extension from its primary sense, the idea that a virgin has an
emotional "blank slate", without complications for her potential
intimate emotional life with men, Unfertilized gametes can be virgin. The Latin
word probably arose by analogy with a suit of lexemes based on , meaning "to be
green, fresh or flourishing", mostly with botanic reference—in
particular, meaning "strip of wood". The first known use of virgin
in English comes from an Anglo-Saxon
manuscript held at Trinity
College, Cambridge.
- c. 1200: Ðar haueð ... martirs, and confessors, and uirgines maked faier bode inne to women. — Trinity College Homilies 185 [ms B.15.34 (369)]
- c. 1300: Conceiud o þe hali gast, born o þe virgine marie. — Cursor Mundi 24977
- c. 1400: Voide & vacand of vices as virgyns it ware. — The Wars of Alexander 4665
Frank Harris
(1923) claims to have given the following humorous etymology in a
lecture, " 'vir,' as everyone knows, is Latin for a man, while
'gin' is good old English for a trap; virgin is therefore a
mantrap." Other, serious, but unsupported etymologies exist in
print.
The German
for "virgin" is Jungfrau.
Although Jungfrau literally means "young woman", a standard formal
German word for a young woman, without implications regarding
sexuality, is Fräulein.
Fräulein can be used in German, as a title of respect, equivalent
to current usage of Miss in English.
Jungfrau is the word reserved specifically for sexual inexperience.
As Frau
means "woman", it suggests a female referent. Unlike English,
German has a specific word for a male virgin Jüngling
("Youngling"). It is, however, rarely used in this sense. Jungfrau,
with some masculine modifier, is more typical, as evidenced by the
film, The 40 Year-Old Virgin, about a 40 year-old male virgin,
titled in German,
Jungfrau (40), männlich, sucht. German also distinguishes
between young women and girls, who are denoted by the word
Mädchen.
The English cognate
"maid" was often used to imply virginity, especially in
poetry.
By contrast, the Greek word for "virgin" is
parthenos (παρθένος,
see Parthenon).
Although typically applied to women, like English, it is also
applied to men, in both cases specifically denoting absence of
sexual experience. When used of men, it does not carry a strong
association of "never-married" status. However, in reference to
women, historically, it was sometimes used to refer to an engaged
woman—parthenos autou (παρθένος αὐτού, his virgin) = his fiancée as
opposed to gunē autou (γυνή αὐτού, his woman) = his wife. This
distinction is necessary due to there being no specific word for
wife (or husband) in Greek.
Human sexual selection
In 1989 and 1990, evolutionary psychologist David M Buss and colleagues from the University of Texas at Austin published results from a large study of expressed preferences in mate selection, then current across human societies. The study involved more than 10,000 respondants from 37 cultures. "The desire for chastity or virginity (lack of prior sexual intercourse) proved to be the most cross-culturally variable. Mainland Chinese placed tremendous value on virginity; Scandinavians typically placed little importance on chastity." Respondants also expressed preferences regarding appearance, income potential, age difference and other factors. Some factors—like kindness, intelligence and health—were valued highly across cultures and by both sexes. A mate's appearance was more commonly reported as being important to men than to women, whereas income potential was more important to women than to men.Also published in 1989 and 1990, a much-cited
study at a United States campus by Clark and Hatfield involved male
and female researchers approaching total strangers of the opposite
sex one-to-one and asking one the following questions.
- Would you go out on a date with me?
- Would you go back to my apartment with me?
- Would you have sex with me?
Studies like those above are consistent with
evolutionary
explanations of certain aspects of human psychology. Psychological
preferences in
sexual
behaviour can have reproductive
consequences, hence natural
selection should operate on them, and may do so differently in
men and women. In particular, "Males who preferred chaste females
in our environment of evolutionary adaptedness, ceteris
paribus, presumably enjoyed greater reproductive success than
males who were indifferent to the sexual contact that a potential
mate had with other males." Dickerman (1981) and Daly & Wilson
(1983) argue, "chastity would also provide a cue to the future
fidelity of a selected mate. A male failing to express such a
preference would risk investing in offspring that were not his."
Buss notes, "A female could be sure her putative children were her
own, regardless of the prior sexual experience of her mate. This
sexual asymmetry yields a specific prediction: Males will value
chastity in a potential mate more than will females."
Technical virginity
Some historians and anthropologists note that
many societies that place a high value on virginity before
marriage, such as the United
States before the sexual
revolution, actually have a large amount of premarital sexual
activity that does not involve vaginal penetration:
for example, oral sex,
anal sex
and mutual
masturbation. This is considered by some people "technical"
virginity, as vaginal intercourse has not occurred but the
participants are sexually active.
Assertions of technical virginity, often made for
religious reasons, may be regarded by some as inaccurate. A number
of sex educators have challenged the idea that "having sex"
explicitly excludes sexual activity other than vaginal intercourse.
They propose instead that it should rather include oral or anal
sex, and mutual masturbation. It therefore follows that once an
individual has engaged in such sexual activity, they are no longer
a virgin in any meaningful sense. Still, many people would admit a
somewhat important difference between those acts that merely give
sexual pleasure (i.e, performing oral sex, a handjob, etc) and
those that receive it (penetrating, being penetrated, or otherwise
brought to orgasm). Though there might be the notion that the
recipient of a handjob has lost their virginity, few people would
consider the hand that performed it to be therefore
deflowered.
There are however anthropological reasons for the
view that vaginal penetration, especially on the part of the woman,
is especially indicative of a change in status, a threshold
irrevocably crossed, the most incontrovertible "loss of virginity".
And that is because a woman who has been vaginally penetrated is
one who may have potentially conceived. From an evolutionary
standpoint, men would prefer "virgin" mates under this definition
to be sure that the woman was not carrying another man's child
which the new husband would be "tricked" into caring for as his
own.
Loss of virginity
The act of losing one's virginity, that is, of a first sexual experience, is commonly considered within Western culture to be an important life event and a rite of passage. It is highlighted by many mainstream Western movies (particularly films aimed at a teenaged audience). The loss of virginity can be viewed as a milestone to be proud of or as a failure to be ashamed of, depending on cultural perceptions. Historically, these perceptions were heavily influenced by perceived gender roles, such that for a male the association was more often with pride and for a female the association was more often with shame.In human females, the hymen is a membrane,
part of the vulva, which
partially occludes the entrance to the vagina, and which stretches, or
is sometimes torn, when the woman first engages in sexual
intercourse. The human hymen can vary widely in thickness,
shape, and flexibility. The presence of an intact membrane has, by
some throughout history, been seen as physical evidence of
virginity in the broader technical sense, though the hymen can be
easily broken by other means.
In the majority of women, the hymen is
sufficiently vestigial
as to pose no obstruction to the entryway of the vagina. The
presence of a broken hymen may therefore indicate that the vagina
has been penetrated but also that it was broken via physical
activity or the use of a tampon or dildo. Many women possess such
thin, fragile hymens, easily stretched and already perforated at
birth, that the hymen can be broken, or merely disappear, in
childhood, without the woman's even being aware of it.
In contrast to the common cases of an absent or
partial hymen, in rare cases a woman may possess an imperforate
hymen, such as prevents the release of menstrual discharge. A
surgical procedure known
as hymenotomy, which
creates an opening in the hymen, is sometimes required to avert
deleterious health effects. The playwright Ben Jonson
claimed that
Queen Elizabeth I of England, the Virgin Queen, had a
"membranum" that made her "incapable of Man", and that a friend of
hers, a "chirurgeon", had offered to remedy the problem with his
scalpel and that Elizabeth had demurred.
The presence of a hymen is a possible indication,
but no guarantee, of virginity, given that it is speculated that
some degree of sexual activity may occur without rupturing the
hymen and because there may exist varying definitions as to the
type and extent of sexual activity that is required to terminate
the state of "virginity". This is further complicated by the
availability of hymenorrhaphy surgical
procedures to repair or replace the hymen. (This procedure is more
common in countries where virginity is greatly prized, as in the
Middle East.)
In some cultures, women are not regarded as
virgins after a sexual
assault, but some people disavow this notion. There are also
those who take this "spiritual" concept of virginity to its
maximum, considering "born
again virgins" to be virgins, regardless of their past sexual
conduct.
In males, there is no physically visible
indicator of virginity. The sexual
partner during the loss of virginity is sometimes colloquially
said to "take" the virginity of the virgin partner. In some places,
this colloquialism is only used when the partner is not a virgin,
but in other places, the virginity of the partner does not matter.
The term "deflower" is sometimes used to also describe the act of
the virgin's partner, and the clinical term "defloration" is
another way to describe the event.
One slang term used for virginity is "cherry"
(often, this term refers to the hymen, but can refer to virginity
in males or females) and for a virgin, deflowering is said to "pop
their cherry," a reference to destruction of the hymen during first
intercourse.
A curious term often seen in English translations
of the works of the Marquis de
Sade is to depucelate. This word is apparently a literal translation of
dépuceler, a French verb derived from pucelle (n.f.), which means
"virgin". Joan of Arc
was commonly called "la Pucelle" by her admirers.
In some countries until the late 20th century, if
a man did not marry a woman whose virginity he had taken, the woman
was allowed to sue the man for money, in some languages named
"wreath
money".
Academic study
Although wide variety of terminology is employed within academic literature, a common term for "losing virginity" is sexual debut. One theory hypothesizes there is an appropriate developmental stage for this, hence an approximate age (see age of consent).Cultural anthropology
Cultural anthropologists have discovered that romantic love and sexual jealousy are universal features of human relationships. Social values related to virginity reflect both sexual jealousy and ideals of romantic love, and appear to be deeply embedded in human nature.Social psychology
Psychology explores the connection between thought and behaviour. Seeking understanding of social (or anti-social) behaviours includes sexual behaviour. Joan Kahn and Kathryn London studied U.S. women married between 1965 and 1985 to see if virginity at marriage influenced risk of divorce. This study makes no recommendation, it simply notes that the women most likely to exercise freedom to enter sexual relationships prior to marriage, overlap significantly with the women most likely to exercise freedom to leave a relationship after marriage. Men were not the subject of this study, they may show a different degree of overlap, greater or lesser.Religion
Hinduism
In Sanskrit a virgin is called . means "diminished", a is the negating prefix and yoni refers to female reproductive organs generically — used freely for womb or vulva as context requires. Hence suggests something like "undefiled womb" or "unspoiled vulva", but could be understood specifically as "unruptured hymen". Common related words are kanyā and kumārī, which refer to a young, unmarried girl, a bride or a daughter in general. Whilst virginity is not strictly implied by the words, it is generally presumed. These are also names of the goddess Durga, who is a virgin in some of her aspects or manifestations (see avatar)."The sun-god said: O beautiful , your meeting
with the demigods cannot be fruitless. Therefore, let me place my
seed in your womb so that you may bear a son. I shall arrange to
keep your virginity intact, since you are still an unmarried
girl."
a legal text attributed to Manu:
"The nuptial texts are applied solely to virgins,
(and) nowhere among men to females who have lost their virginity,
for such (females) are excluded from religious ceremonies."
Contemporary Hinduism
In predominantly Hindu societies in Nepal and India, any form of
premarital sexual intercourse is still frowned upon immensely and
is considered an act destined to bring great dishonour and
disrespect to the family. It is practically impossible for a
non-virgin girl to find a partner from a traditional family.
Judaism
Virginity first appears in the Jewish scriptures in Genesis, where Eliezer is seeking a wife for his master's son. He meets Rebekah, and the narrative tells us, "the damsel was very fair to look upon, a virgin, neither had any man known her" (Bible verse |Genesis|24:16). Virginity is a recurring theme in the Bible — the nation is frequently personified as the virgin daughter of Israel in the prophetic poetry. It is a wistful phrase, since Genesis also says that Israel's (Jacob's) only daughter Dinah was, in fact, raped as she entered the promised land. The Torah also contains laws governing betrothal, marriage and divorce, with particular provisions regarding virginity in .Sex in Judaism is not seen as dirty or
undesirable — in fact, sex within marriage is considered a mitzvah, or desirable virtue.
Jewish law contains rules related to and protecting female virgins
and dealing with consensual and non-consensual pre-marital sex. The
thrust of Jewish law's guidance on sex is effectively that it
should not be rejected, but should be lived as a wholesome part of
life.
Although there is a provision in Judaism for sex
outside of marriage, the idea of a pilegesh, is it very seldom
used, partially because of the emphasis placed on marriage and
other social pressures, and partially because some prominent Rabbis
have been opposed to it, for example Maimonides.
While a child born of certain forbidden
relationships, such as adultery or incest, is considered a mamzer, approximately translated
as illegitimate, who can only marry another mamzer, a child born
out of wedlock is not considered a mamzer unless also adulterous or
incestuous.
Contemporary Judaism
However, in practice, contemporary Judaism is
fairly lenient about sexual relations and has been, since its early
days, fairly pragmatic about the realities of sex and sexuality.
The more liberal denominations (Reconstructionist
Judaism, Reform
Judaism, and Conservative
Judaism) are relatively open to pre-marital sex: while it is
not encouraged, it is not ignored, either—rules governing sexuality
still apply, etc. In stricter denominations, such as the Hasidim, sex before
marriage can be relatively uncommon, as religious practices of
modesty, arranged
marriages, marriages at a younger age, and related practices, may
apply, thus restricting the mobility of single people.
Greece and Rome
Virginity has been often considered to be a virtue denoting purity and physical self-restraint and is an important characteristic of Greek goddesses Athena, Artemis, and Hestia. The Vestal Virgins were strictly celibate priestesses of Vesta. The Maiden or Virgin is one of the three persons of the Triple Goddess in many Neopagan traditions. The constellation Virgo represents a wide selection of sacred virgins.Christianity
Like Judaism, from which it was derived, the New Testament views sex within marriage positively, in fact, it is encouraged in Bible verse 1|Corinthians|7. Just as this chapter is against sex without marriage, so it is against marriage without sex. Self control is valued, however it is considered unrealistic for most, and therefore allows for sexual expression in the safe boundaries of marriage.Some have theorized that the New Testament was
not against sex before marriage. The discussion turns on two Greek
words — moicheia (μοιχεία, adultery) and porneia (:el:πορνεία,
fornication see also
pornography). The
first word is restricted to contexts involving sexual betrayal of a
spouse, however the second word is a generic term for illegitimate
sexual activity. As such it is not specific about which particular
behaviours are considered illegitimate. Elsewhere in Bible verse
1|Corinthians|, incest,
homosexual intercourse and prostitution are all explicitly
forbidden by name. The theory suggests it is these, and only these
behaviours that are intended by Paul's prohibition in chapter
seven. Two of the strongest arguments against this theory are: 1.
Paul speaks as though porneia is widespread and virtually
inevitable, which is unlikely of incest, homosexuality and
prostitution, but plausible of pre-marital sex; and 2. the Old
Testament especially, but also the New outside Corinthians, speaks
against pre-marital sex; without evidence Paul permitted
pre-marital sex, it is safer to assume he did not.
As in Judaism, the interpretation of Genesis is
that it describes sex as a gift from God to be celebrated within
the context of marriage. The New Testament also speaks of the
Christian's body as a holy temple that the Spirit of God comes to
dwell in. (Bible verse 1|Corinthians|3:16) Purity in general is
deeply threaded throughout the entire Bible.
Christians have officially accepted the New
Testament claim that Mary,
the mother of Jesus, was a virgin
at the time Jesus was conceived, based on the accounts in the
gospels of Matthew
and Luke.
The Roman
Catholic, Eastern
Orthodox, and Oriental
Orthodox denominations, additionally
hold to the dogma of the
perpetual virginity of Mary. However, Protestants cite evidence
against this including Bible verse |Mark|6:3|HCSB: "Isn't this the
carpenter, the son of Mary, and the brother of James, Joses, Judas,
and Simon? And aren't His sisters here with us?". The Catholic
Church holds that in Semitic usage the terms "brother," "sister"
are applied not only to children of the same parents, but to
nephews, nieces, cousins, half-brothers, and half-sisters. Some
Christians may refer to her as the Virgin Mary or the Blessed
Virgin Mary.
The above statement is generally not true for
Protestants. Most protestants believe that at the time of the birth
of Jesus, Mary was a virgin. However, she was engaged and then
married to Joseph, with whom she later had children.
Catholic theology
While traditional Catholic theology recognizes a physical aspect of virginity, the moral aspects are far more important. In traditional theology, virgins are thought to receive a special aureola in heaven, and as such it was important to define exactly what constituted this "theological virginity". Depending on the culture, this definition of virginity may be very different from the "social definition of virginity." In Catholic theology, virginity is technically lost by any deliberately felt sexual pleasure, and as such is forfeit even by masturbation, though not necessarily by sexual acts in which one participates but in a way that does not cause genital pleasure for oneself. In some part because of this last possibility, it is specified that not all virgins are necessarily chaste, and that an intention of purity is needed for the virginity to be meritous. However, while this intention can be lost and restored and the aureola still gained, the physical fact of sexual pleasure voluntarily engaged in is irreversible.In some ways, this is the most logically
consistent definition; in traditional theological thought there
is little objective difference, either physiologically or morally,
between being brought to orgasm by one's own hand and being brought
to orgasm by the body of another if the latter act was not open to
life. Acts such as masturbation and sodomy have traditionally been
regarded as worse sexual sins because they are allegedly unnatural
for not being open to the possibility of conception, whereas
fornication or
adultery could still
theoretically be "natural" even if not moral. Therefore, it would
be odd for theology to conclude that virginity is lost by a less
grave sin but preserved in worse and more unnatural sins of
lust.
The Catholic Encyclopedia says: "There are two
elements in virginity: the material element, that is to say, the
absence, in the past and in the present, of all complete and
voluntary delectation, whether from lust or from the lawful use of
marriage; and the formal element, that is the firm resolution to
abstain forever from sexual pleasure." And, "Virginity is
irreparably lost by sexual pleasure, voluntarily and completely
experienced." However, for the purposes of consecrated
virgins and nuns, prior
masturbation is not usually inquired into, and canonically it is
enough that any sexual activity of theirs is not publicly known or
infamous.
Aquinas,
emphasizing that acts other than copulation destroy virginity, but
also clarifying that involuntary sexual pleasure or pollution does
not destroy virginity says in his Summa
Theologica, "Pleasure resulting from resolution of semen may
arise in two ways. If this be the result of the mind's purpose, it
destroys virginity, whether copulation takes place or not.
Augustine, however, mentions copulation, because such like
resolution is the ordinary and natural result thereof. On another
way this may happen beside the purpose of the mind, either during
sleep, or through violence and without the mind's consent, although
the flesh derives pleasure from it, or again through weakness of
nature, as in the case of those who are subject to a flow of semen.
On such cases virginity is not forfeit, because such like pollution
is not the result of impurity which excludes virginity."
Female saints and blesseds are
generally given one of two titles. Those who were either unmarried,
nuns, or consecrated
virgins are given the title "Virgin"
while those who have been married are given the title "Holy Women",
not virgins.
Christian Mysticism and Gnostic Christianity
In Christian
mysticism, Gnosticism, as
well as some Hellenistic
religions, there is a female spirit or Goddess named
Sophia
that is said to embody wisdom and whom is sometimes
described as a virgin. In Roman
Catholic mysticism,
Hildegard
of Bingen celebrated Sophia as a cosmic figure both in her
writing and art. Within the Protestant
tradition in England, 17th
Century Christian
Mystic, Universalist
and founder of the Philadelphian Society Jane Leade
wrote copious descriptions of her visions and dialogues with the
"Virgin Sophia" who, she said, revealed to her the spiritual
workings of the Universe. Leade was hugely influenced by the
theosophical writings of 16th Century German Christian
mystic Jakob
Böhme, who also speaks of the Sophia in works such as The Way
to Christhttp://www.passtheword.org/DIALOGS-FROM-THE-PAST/waychrst.htm.
Jakob Böhme was very influential to a number of Christian
mystics and religious leaders, including George Rapp
and the Harmony
Society. The Harmony Society was a religious pietist group that
lived
communally, were pacifistic, and
advocated celibacy
among its membership.
Contemporary Christianity
In Finland, the phrase ei ennen papin aamenta
(not before priest says Amen) refers to
abstinence before marriage. It is also used in any contexts to warn
doing anything prematurely or before its time. The phrase includes
also a side meaning "but do it for good once the priest has said
the amen!".
Until recently, some states that have a
significant Christian population have or have had laws protecting
virginity. Germany abandoned a
law (§1300 BGB)
only in 1998 that entitled the deflowered virgin to compensation if
the relationship ended. In Mexico, there is a very old saying,
still used by women today: "Fulfill your promise to marry me (if we
had sex), or leave me how I was (a virgin)".
Islam
Islam provides a decree that sexual activity must occur only between married individuals. The husband and wife must always keep in mind the needs, both sexual and emotional, of each other. The concept of sex-without-marriage between "Master" and "Slave maid" had been ended by the Holy Prophet "Muhammad (Sallallaho Alaihi Wasallum)". This is referred to in the Qur'an as ma malakat aymanukum or "what your right hands possess". Qur'an 17:32 says "And come not near to the unlawful sexual intercourse. Verily, it is a Fâhishah [i.e. anything that transgresses its limits (a great sin)], and an evil way (that leads one to Hell unless Allâh forgives him)." Unlawful sexual intercourse zina (الزنى) refers both to adultery and premarital sex.Medicine and biology
In early modern Europe, prolonged virginity in women was believed to cause the disease of chlorosis or "green sickness".For cross
breedings of some laboratory animals, females are needed that
have not already copulated in order to insure that the offspring
possess the intended genotype. To do this in Drosophila flies
for example, females are used that are maximally 6 to 8 hours old
(at 25 °C); only after this period has elapsed do inseminations
begin.
Notes
See also
External links
*Bozon, Michael. 'At what age do women and men have their first sexual intercourse? World comparisons and recent trends'. Population and Societies 391 (2003) 1–4.- Cooksey, Elizabeth C., Frank L. Mott and Stefanie A. Neubauer. 'Friendships and Early Relationships: Links to Sexual Initiation Among American Adolescents Born to Young Mothers'. Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health 34 (2002): 118–126.
- Rich, Lauren M. and Sun-Bin Kim. 'Employment and the sexual and reproductive behavior of female adolescents'. Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health 34 (2002).
- Rosenberg, J. 'Age at first sex and human papillomavirus infection linked through behavioral factors and partner's traits'. Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health 34 (2002).*'Many Regret Early First Sex', Health News, 14 April 2008 — report on an Irish study, and a program to discourage early sex*University of California, Santa Barbara's SexInfo — advice concerning first time sex
Literature
*Armour, Stacy and Dana L Haynie. 'Adolescent Sexual Debut and Later Delinquency'. Journal of Youth and Adolescence 36 (2007): 141-152. [abstract only]- Goodson, P., A. Evans and E. Edmundson. 'Female adolescents and onset of sexual intercourse: A theory-based review of research from 1984 to 1994.' Journal of Adolescent Health 21 (1997): 147-156. [abstract only]*Bently, Thomas. The Monument of Matrones: Conteining Seven Severall Lamps of Virginitie. Thomas Dawson, 1582.
- Carpenter, Laura. Virginity Lost: An Intimate Portrait of First Sexual Experiences. New York University Press, 2005. ISBN 0814716539
maidenhood in Arabic: بتولية
maidenhood in Breton: Gwerc'hded
maidenhood in Catalan: Virginitat
maidenhood in Czech: Panna
maidenhood in Danish: Jomfru
maidenhood in German: Jungfrau
maidenhood in Estonian: Neitsi
maidenhood in Spanish: Virginidad
maidenhood in Esperanto: Virgeco
maidenhood in Persian: باکره
maidenhood in French: Virginité
maidenhood in Korean: 처녀성
maidenhood in Indonesian: Perawan
maidenhood in Italian: Verginità
maidenhood in Hebrew: בתולה
maidenhood in Cornish: Gwyrghes
maidenhood in Lithuanian: Nekaltybė
maidenhood in Dutch: Maagd (seksueel)
maidenhood in Japanese: 処女
maidenhood in Norwegian: Jomfrudom
maidenhood in Norwegian Nynorsk: Jomfru
maidenhood in Polish: Dziewictwo
maidenhood in Portuguese: Virgindade
maidenhood in Russian: Девственность
maidenhood in Sicilian: Virginità
maidenhood in Simple English: Virginity
maidenhood in Slovak: Panenstvo
maidenhood in Finnish: Neitsyys
maidenhood in Swedish: Jungfru
maidenhood in Vietnamese: Trinh nữ
maidenhood in Turkish: Bekâret
maidenhood in Chinese:
处女