Dictionary Definition
slattern
Noun
1 a prostitute who attracts customers by walking
the streets [syn: streetwalker, street girl,
hooker, hustler, floozy, floozie]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
Dating from the seventeenth century: related to slattering, “slovenly”, from the dialectal verb slatter, “to slop, to spill”.Pronunciation
- /ˈslætɜːn/
- Rhymes: -ætə(r)n
Noun
- A slut.
- A dirty and untidy woman.
- 1809: Noah Webster, Esq., An American Selection of Lessons in
Reading and Speaking: Calculated to Improve the Minds and Refine
the Taste of Youth, to Which are Prefixed Rules in Elocution and
Directions for Expressing the Principal Passions of the Mind, p24
- 3. Cookery is familiar to her, with the price and quality of provisions ; and she is a ready accountant. Her chief view, however, is to serve her mother and lighten her cares. She holds cleanliness and neetness to be indispensable in a woman ; and that a slattern is disgusting, especially if beautiful.
- 1868: Lizzie Leavenworth, ★★Slattern Genius★★, the 17th day of September; quoted in:
- 2001: Anne Russo & Cherise Kramarae, The Radical Women’s
Press of the 1850s, p202
- …How many times I have heard a woman called a slattern, because she could not keep a house in order, when had she been allowed to write out her sublime thoughts, which were all in another direction, she would have astonished the world with her genius. Talk about women getting out of their sphere; can they do so any more than they are now. Look at the thousands of women who are not fit to be mothers, and yet are constantly bringing children into existence, children which will rise up to curse them for that very existence; and why is this? because society is forcing women into marriage, before they have any knowledge of what they are fitted for and what they might excel in. We want better wives, mothers and children, and before we can have this, we must have better women.
- 1933: Noel Coward, Private Lives an Intimate Comedy in Three
Acts, ACT Ⅲ
- AMANDA: I’ve been brought up to believe that it’s beyond the
pale, for a man to strike a woman.
- ELYOT: A very poor tradition. Certain women should be struck regularly, like gongs.
- AMANDA: You’re an unmitigated cad, and a bully.
- ELYOT: And you’re an ill-mannered, bad tempered slattern.
- AMANDA i loudly: Slattern indeed.
- ELYOT: Yes, slattern, slattern, slattern, and fishwife.
- VICTOR: Keep your mouth shut, you swine.
- ELYOT: Mind your own damned business.
- [They are about to fight, when Sibyl rushes between them.]
- SIBYL: Stop, stop, it’s no use going on like this. Stop, please.
- ELYOT: A very poor tradition. Certain women should be struck regularly, like gongs.
- AMANDA: I’ve been brought up to believe that it’s beyond the
pale, for a man to strike a woman.
- 1809: Noah Webster, Esq., An American Selection of Lessons in
Reading and Speaking: Calculated to Improve the Minds and Refine
the Taste of Youth, to Which are Prefixed Rules in Elocution and
Directions for Expressing the Principal Passions of the Mind, p24
- A prostitute who attracts customers by walking the streets.
Synonyms
see Wikisaurus:promiscuous womanReferences
Derived terms
Extensive Definition
Slut or slattern is a pejorative term for a person
who is deemed sexually promiscuous. The term has
traditionally been applied to women and is generally used as an
insult or offensive term
of disparagement. Slut has also been reclaimed as a slang term in the BDSM, polyamorous and gay and bisexual
communities. It may be used by the person concerned as an
expression of pride in
their status, or to
express envy at the
"success rate" of others.
Etymology
Although the ultimate origin of slut is unknown,
it first appeared in Middle
English in 1402 as slutte (AHD), with the meaning "a dirty,
untidy, or slovenly woman." Even earlier, Geoffrey
Chaucer used the word sluttish (c.1386) to describe a slovenly
man; however, later uses appear almost exclusively associated with
women. The modern sense of "a sexually promiscuous woman" dates to
at least 1450.
Another early meaning was "kitchen maid or
drudge" (c. 1450), a meaning retained as late as the 18th century,
when hard knots of dough found in bread were referred to as "slut's
pennies." A notable example of this use is Samuel
Pepys's diary description of his servant girl as "an admirable
slut" who "pleases us mightily, doing more service than both the
others and deserves wages better" (February 1664). In
the 19th century, the word was used as a euphemism in place of bitch in the sense of "a female
dog."
Similar words appear in Dutch, German and Swedish
dialects meaning "a dirty woman," indicating a common ancestor in
Germanic languages. A popular theory connects slut to earlier
Germanic forms meaning "slush" or "mud puddle," but this derivation
remains in question.
While the word slut also appears in modern
Swedish,
where it means "ending", it is not linguistically related to the
English word. The Swedish word derives from the Proto-Germanic word
*slut meaning "to close", which arrived in German as the word
"Schluss" with the same meaning of "ending". It is related to the
Latin word claudo meaning "to close".
Common usages
The accepted denotative meaning is a sexually
promiscuous woman or "a woman of a low or loose character; a bold
or impudent girl; a hussy, jade." These definitions identify a slut
as a person of low character — a person who lacks the
ability or chooses not to exercise a power of discernment to order
their affairs, such as a cad, rake, or
womanizer.
The term slut is therefore frequently used as an
insult. The derogatory power of the term
derives both from its denotative meaning of a promiscuous woman,
but also from its historical and regional connotations or alternate
meanings that identify a slut as a dirty or unkempt person. These
additional meanings and connotations are negative and identify a
slut as being a slovenly and ugly person, for example as in these
quotations from OED2:
- Hearne, 1715: "Nor was she a Woman of any Beauty, but was a
nasty Slut."
- Shenstone, 1765: "She's ugly, she's old,... And a slut, and a scold."
- Saturday Review (London), 1862: "There are a good many slut-holes in London to rake out."
The British journalist Katharine
Whitehorn attempted to re-claim this latter meaning in a famous
1963 article
in The
Observer: "Have you ever taken anything out of the
dirty-clothes basket because it had become, relatively, the cleaner
thing? Changed stockings in a taxi? Could you try on clothes in any
shop, any time, without worrying about your underclothes? How many
things are in the wrong room—cups in the study, boots in the
kitchen? ... [this makes] you one of us: the miserable, optimistic,
misunderstood race of sluts." This article prompted a flurry of
correspondence, with many women writing in to describe their own
acts of sluttishness.
Alternate usages
Recent times have seen alternate slang usages of the word slut. It is often used against gay males and bisexuals, comparing them without merit as people who are promiscuous in that they have, or are reputed to have, many sexual partners, or whose sexuality is voracious, indiscriminate, and shameful.With BDSM, polyamorous and non-monogamous
people, in usage taken from the book The
Ethical Slut, the term has been reclaimed as an expression of
choice to openly have multiple partners,
and revel in that choice: "a slut is a person of any gender who has
the courage to lead life according to the radical proposition that
sex is nice and pleasure is good for you." (Easton, Dossie, &
Catherine A. Liszt, The
Ethical Slut, San Francisco 1997, p. 4, emphasis in original).
A slut is a person who has taken control of their sexuality and has
sex with whomever they choose, regardless of religious or social
pressures or conventions to conform to a straight-laced monogamous
lifestyle committed to one partner for life. The term has been
"taken back" to express the rejection of the concept that
government, society, or religion may judge or control one's
personal liberties, and the right to control one's own
sexuality.
A few porn stars have
embraced the term as a badge of pride for a sex-positive
person.
The term is also used (principally by women) to
describe a woman dressed provocatively or a woman being overtly
flirtatious.
See also
References
- Harper, Douglas. Online Etymology Dictionary, entry for "slut"
External links
slattern in German: Schlampe
slattern in Persian: جنده
slattern in French: Salope
slattern in Dutch: Slet
slattern in Finnish: Huora-sanan
käyttö
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
baggage, bimbo, blowsy, crone, dowdy, drab, draggletailed, fallen
woman, frowsy, frump, gammer, hag, harlot, hog, hooker, hussy, hustler, jade, litterbug, loose woman,
pig, pro, prostitute, schlep, schlump, slob, sloven, slut, sordid, streetwalker, strumpet, swine, tart, traipse, tramp, trollop, trull, wanton, wench, whore, witch