A young woman; a girl; a maiden. --Shak. [1913
Webster] Lord and lady, groom and wench. --Chaucer. [1913 Webster]
That they may send again My most sweet wench, and gifts to boot.
--Chapman. [1913 Webster] He was received by the daughter of the
house, a pretty, buxom, blue-eyed little wench. --W. Black. [1913
Webster]
A low, vicious young woman; a drab; a strumpet.
[1913 Webster] She shall be called his wench or his leman.
--Chaucer. [1913 Webster] It is not a digression to talk of bawds
in a discourse upon wenches. --Spectator. [1913 Webster]
A colored woman; a negress. [Archaic, U. S.]
[1913 Webster]
Wench \Wench\ (w[e^]nch), v. i. [imp. & p. p.
Wenched (w[e^]ncht); p.
pr. & vb. n. Wenching.] To frequent the
company of wenches, or women of ill fame. [1913 Webster]
Word Net
wench n : informal terms for a (young) woman [syn: dame, doll, skirt, chick, bird] v : frequent prostitutesMoby Thesaurus
Jane, Jezebel, abigail, amah, au pair girl, ayah, babe, baby, bad woman, baggage, betweenmaid, biddy, bird, bitch, broad, chambermaid, chaperon, chick, chippy, clitoromaniac, cocotte, colleen, companion, cook, cutie, dame, damoiselle, damsel, demoiselle, doll, drab, duenna, easy lay, easy woman, femme de chambre, fille de chambre, filly, floozy, frail, frail sister, gal, gentlewoman, girl, girlie, grisette, handmaid, handmaiden, harridan, heifer, hen, hired girl, housemaid, hoyden, hussy, hysteromaniac, jade, jeune fille, jezebel, jill, junior miss, kitchenmaid, lady-help, lady-in-waiting, lass, lassie, little missy, live-in maid, live-out maid, loose woman, mademoiselle, maid, maiden, maidservant, minx, miss, missy, nursemaid, nymphet, nympho, nymphomaniac, parlormaid, pickup, piece, quail, quean, romp, schoolgirl, schoolmaid, schoolmiss, scullery maid, servant girl, servitress, skirt, slattern, slip, slut, soubrette, strumpet, subdeb, subdebutante, subteen, subteener, tart, teenybopper, tomato, tomboy, tramp, trollop, trull, tweeny, upstairs maid, uteromaniac, virgin, waiting maid, wanton, whore, young creature, young thingEnglish
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -ɛntʃ
Noun
- a young woman, especially a servant
- a promiscuous woman
Verb
- To frequent prostitutes
A girl is any female human from birth through childhood and adolescence to attainment of
adulthood and may also
mean a young woman.
Etymology
The word girl first appeared during the Middle Ages between 1250 and 1300 CE and came from the Anglo-Saxon words gerle (also spelled girle or gurle), likely cognate with the Old Low German word gör (sometimes given as kerl). The Anglo-Saxon word gerela meaning dress or clothing item also seems to have been used as a metonym in some sense.Girl has meant any young unmarried woman since
about 1530. Its first noted meaning for sweetheart is 1648. The
earliest known appearance of girl-friend is in 1892 and
girl
next door, meant as a teenaged female or young woman with a
kind of wholesome appeal, dates only to 1961.
Deprecated meaning
Although the word girl is sometimes used to describe a female of any age, such as in some casual social settings by women among themselves, when meant to describe a woman in professional or other adult contexts it might imply child or be otherwise misleading (as with the term boy when applied to an adult man), hence this meaning is often deprecated.Demographics
In 2004 there were more than one billion girls in the world. At birth girls are a slight minority although this changes with age. Since the 1700s the human sex ratio has been observed as about 1,050 boys for every 1,000 girls born and sex selection on the part of parents further lessens the number of female births. Although the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights has asserted "primary education shall be compulsory and available free to all" girls are slightly less likely to be enrolled as students in primary and secondary schools (70%:74% and 59%:65%). Worldwide efforts have been made to end this disparity (such as through the Millennium Development Goals) and the gap has closed since 1990.Gender and environment
Biological gender interacts with environment in ways not fully understood. Identical twin girls separated at birth and reunited decades later have shown both startling similarities and differences. In 2005 Kim Wallen of Emory University noted, "I think the 'nature versus nurture' question is not meaningful, because it treats them as independent factors, whereas in fact everything is nature and nurture." Wallen said gender differences emerge very early and come about through an underlying preference males and females have for their chosen activities. Girls tend to like toys and other objects they can interact with, while boys will more likely prefer "things that they can manipulate and do things to." According to Wallen, expectations will nonetheless play a role in how girls perform academically. For example, if females skilled in math are told a test is "gender neutral" they achieve high scores, but if they are told males outperformed females in the past, the females will do much worse. "What’s strange is," Wallen observed, "according to the research, all one apparently has to do is tell a woman who has a lifetime of socialization of being poor in math that a math test is gender neutral, and all effects of that socialization go away." Author Judith Harris has said that aside from their genetic contribution, the nurturing provided by parents likely has less long-term influence over their offspring than other environmental aspects such as the children's peer group.In England, studies by the National Literacy
Trust have shown girls do better than boys in every area of
learning before they are 5 and girls score consistently higher than
boys from the ages of 5 through 16, with the most striking
differences noted in reading and writing skills. Moreover, girls
tend to outperform boys at GCSE and A level in the UK.
Historically, girls lagged on standardized tests. In 1996 the
average score of 503 for US girls from all races on the SAT verbal test was 4
points lower than boys. In math, the average for girls was 492,
which was 35 points lower than boys. "When girls take the exact
same courses," commented Wayne Camara, a research scientist with
the College Board, "that 35-point gap dissipates quite a bit." At
the time Leslie R. Wolfe, president of the Center for Women Policy
Studies said girls scored differently on the math tests because
they tend to work the problems out while boys use "test-taking
tricks" such as immediately checking the answers already given in
multiple-choice questions. Wolfe said girls are steady and thorough
while "boys play this test like a pin-ball machine." Wolfe also
said although girls had lower SAT scores they consistently get
higher grades than boys across all courses their first year in
college. By 2006 girls were outscoring boys on the verbal portion
of the SAT by
11 points. A 2005 University of Chicago study showed that a
majority presence of girls in the classroom tends to enhance the
academic performance of boys.
Art and literature
Egyptian murals included sympathetic portraits of young girls who were daughters of royalty. Sappho's poetry carries love poems addressed to girls.In Europe, some early paintings featuring girls
were Petrus
Christus' Portrait of a Young Girl (about 1460), Juan de
Flandes' Portrait of a Young Girl (about 1505), Frans Hals'
Die
Amme mit dem Kind in 1620, Diego
Velázquez' Las Meninas
in 1656, Jan Steen's The
Feast of St. Nicolas (about 1660) and Johannes
Vermeer's
Girl with a Pearl Earring along with
Girl Reading a Letter at an Open Window. Later paintings of
girls include Albert
Anker's portrait of a Girl
with a Domino Tower and Camille
Pissarro's 1883 Portrait
of a Felix Daughter.
American paintings featuring girls include
Mary
Cassatt's 1884
Children on the Beach and Whistler's
Harmony in Gray and Green: Miss Cicely Alexander and The White Girl
(shown at right).
Many novels begin with the childhood of their
heroine, such as Jane Eyre who
suffers ill treatment or Natasha in War and
Peace, who is sentimentalized. Other novels include Harper
Lee's To
Kill a Mockingbird in which a young girl is protagonist.
Vladimir Nabokov's controversial book Lolita (1955) is
about a doomed relationship between a 12 year old girl and an adult
scholar as they travel across the United States. Memoirs
of a Geisha by Arthur Golden begins as the female main
character and her sister are dropped off in the pleasure district
after being separated from their family.
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis
Carroll featured a widely noted female protagonist. Moreover,
Carroll's photographs of girls are often cited in histories of
photographic art.
Popular culture
European fairy tales have preserved memorable stories about girls. Among these are Goldilocks and the Three Bears, Rapunzel, Hans Christian Andersen's The Little Match Girl, The Little Mermaid, The Princess and the Pea and the Brothers Grimm's Little Red Riding Hood.Children's books about girls include
Little House on the Prairie, Alice
in Wonderland, Pippi
Longstocking, Dragonsong and
A
Wrinkle in Time. Books which have both boy and girl
protagonists have tended to focus more on the boys but important
girl characters appear in Knight's
Castle,
The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe,
The Book of Three and the Harry Potter
series.
There have been many American comic books and
comic strips featuring a girl as the main character such as
Little
Lulu, Little
Orphan Annie, Girl Genius
and Amelia
Rules. In superhero comic books an early girl character was
Etta Candy, one of Wonder
Woman's sidekicks.
In the Peanuts series (by
Charles
Schulz) girl characters include Peppermint
Patty, Lucy van
Pelt and Sally
Brown.
In Japanese animated cartoons and comic books girls are often
protagonists. Most of Hayao
Miyazaki's animated films feature a young girl heroine, as in
Majo no takkyūbin (Kiki's
Delivery Service). There are many other girl protagonists in
the Shōjo style of
manga, which is targeted to girls as an audience. Among these are
The
Wallflower, Ceres,
Celestial Legend, Tokyo Mew
Mew and Full Moon
o Sagashite. Meanwhile, some genres of Japanese cartoons may
feature sexualized and objectified portrayals of girls.
Sexualization
of young girls in art and entertainment has been a common theme
across all eras and mediums. This has been more or less explicitly
visible in modern cinema and television. Some famous examples
include Taxi Driver,
Diva, Lolita
The Blue Lagoon, Léon: The
Professional and Pretty
Baby, all of which deal with young girls in adult situations,
typically under extraordinary circumstances.
wench in Arabic: بنت
wench in Azerbaijani: Qız
wench in Breton: Plac'h
wench in Danish: Pige
wench in Pennsylvania German: Meedel
wench in German: Mädchen
wench in Esperanto: Knabino
wench in Persian: دختر
wench in French: Fille
wench in Irish: Cailín
wench in Scottish Gaelic: Caileag
wench in Korean: 소녀
wench in Hungarian: Lány
wench in Dutch: Meisje
wench in Japanese: 少女
wench in Norwegian: Jente
wench in Norwegian Nynorsk: Jente
wench in Low German: Marjell
wench in Polish: Dziewczyna
wench in Portuguese: Menina
wench in Russian: Девочка
wench in Sicilian: Carusa
wench in Simple English: Girl
wench in Slovak: Dievča
wench in Swedish: Flicka
wench in Tajik: Духтар
wench in Turkish: Kız
wench in Yiddish: מיידל
wench in Contenese: 女仔
wench in Chinese: 女孩