Dictionary Definition
cuckold n : a man whose wife committed adultery v
: be sexually unfaithful to one's partner in marriage; "She cheats
on her husband"; "Might her husband be wandering?" [syn: cheat on,
cheat, betray, wander]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
Derived from cucuault (from cucu#Old French, the Cuckoo bird, some varieties of which lay their eggs in another's nest). Appears in in noun form circa 1250 as cokewald. First known use of the verb form is 1589.Noun
- A man married to an unfaithful wife (Traditionally, a husband who does not know or accept this position, although current usage sometimes includes one who condones or tolerates her adultery. An accepting husband is more precisely called a "wittol," from the Middle English for "wise [knowing] cuckold".)
- A comic figure from medieval and Shakespearian drama.
Translations
man with unfaithful wife
Verb
- To make a cuckold of someone by being unfaithful, or by seducing his wife.
Translations
to cuckold
- French: cocufier
- Italian: fare le corna
- Russian: наставить рога
- Sicilian: fari li corna
Adjective
- Possessing the qualities of a cuckold.
Extensive Definition
A cuckold is a married man whose wife has sex
with other men. In current usage it sometimes refers to non-married
couples in committed relationships as well, although the
traditional meaning is a man whose wife is adulterous.
History of the term
"Cuckold" is derived from the Old French for the Cuckoo bird, "Cocu" with the pejorative suffix -ald. The earliest written use of the Middle English derivation, “cokewold” occurs in 1250. The females of certain varieties of Cuckoo lay their eggs in other bird’s nests, freeing themselves from the need to nurture the eggs to hatching. In medieval Europe, the law, custom, and the church all defined married women as a category of property held by their husbands. Although Christian marriage vows strictly enjoined sexual exclusivity in a marriage for both partners, custom rarely enforced it on the husband (although Catholic doctrine held infidelity by either party to be a mortal sin).A nuance of the word often overlooked in
contemporary usage is that it refers to a man who, like the bird
warming the cuckoo’s eggs, is unaware of his victimization. A man
who knows and acquiesced, in his wife’s taking of another lover was
called a "wittol," itself
a derivation from the Middle English for "willing (as in knowing)
cuckold."
Cuckolds have sometimes been written as "wearing
the horns of a cuckold" or just "wearing the horns." This refers to
the fact that the man being cuckolded is the last to know of his
wife's infidelity. He is wearing horns that can be seen by
everybody but him. This also refers to a tradition claiming that in
villages of unknown European location, the community would gather
to collectively humiliate a man whose wife gives birth to a child
recognizably not his own. According to this legend, a parade was
held in which the hapless husband is forced to wear antlers on his
head as a symbol of his wife’s infidelity. Whether this did
actually happen or not is irrelevant to the phrase, which
survived.
The French equivalent of "wearing horns" is
"porter des cornes" and is used by Molière to describe someone
whose husband has been unfaithful. Molière's
L'École
des femmes (1662) is the story of
a man who mocks cuckolds and becomes one at the end. In Geoffrey
Chaucer's Canterbury
Tales (c.1372-77), the Miller's
Tale is a story that humorously examines the life of a
cuckold.
Cultural usage
In Australia, Brazil, Germany, Bulgaria, Greece, Italy, Poland, Portugal, Russia, Croatia, Slovenia, Spanish speaking countries and also Arabic speaking countries, "horns" are a metaphor for suffering the infidelity of a partner, not limited to husbands in modern usage. However, the use of the term dates from the Roman empire, since legionaries returning from the war were given horns as a triumph or prize. So, the use of the term is a mockery of the husband, victorious in the battlefield, but defeated in his own bed. The gesture of the horned hand can be used to insult the cuckold.The Italian
equivalent is cornuto,
sharing the same exact double entendre with cornuted,
asserting both featuring
horns and cuckolded. Its use is playful and lightheartedly
derisive, with little or no particular efficacy in scorning someone
during confrontations as it is lacking earnest damning credentials,
potentially leading all parties to a chuckle and smothering the feud
at its inception. A pervasive metaphor parodies the use of
cornuto to great effect: Il bue che dà
del cornuto
all'asino, meaning
The ox labelling the donkey cornute, equivalent to
Pot calling the kettle black.
In Portuguese
the terms corno ("horn"), cornudo or chifrudo ("horned") are used
to spite or mock the cheated male partner. The expression corno
manso ("tame horned") is used to indicate those men who, although
cheated by their partners, come to accept it as a fact of their
lives.
The Spanish
word for a consenting cuckold,
cabrón, has such an offensive nuance that it is a taboo word
rarely used with its original meaning, "he-goat". However, according to the
tone and the relation to the addressed, it can be even
laudatory.
The Chinese term for "cuckold" is literally
translated to "wearing a green hat" (戴綠帽, dài lǜ mào). It is
because of this that it is extremely rare to see any Chinese man
wearing a green hat.
In Trinidad
& Tobago the term "horn" is used in conjunction with
cuckolds, or anyone of either sex who has a cheating spouse. Other
uses include "to horn" (to sleep with someone else's spouse),
"horning" (the act of cheating on your spouse), "horner-man" (a man
who is sleeping with someone else's spouse) and "horner-woman" (a
woman who is sleeping with someone else's spouse), "to get horn",
"to take (a) horn". It is usually used in a pejorative sense.
Numerous calypsoes
have been written about the topic; the most famous being "Horn Me
Sandra" by the calypsonian known as
Lord Kitchener.
Interestingly this horn analogy extends even to
Turkey where
the cuckolded husband is termed boynuzlu or the "horned one".
Cuckoldry as a fetish
Cuckoldry as a fetish has been around since at least the time of Leopold von Sacher-Masoch (the writer after whom the term Masochism is coined). Sacher-Masoch's wife, Aurora Rümelin, recounts in her memoirs multiple instances of Sacher-Masoch asking, begging and even threatening her to make her cuckold him so he could experience the pain and humiliation of the act. To that end, Sacher-Masoch created multiple opportunities for the adulterous act to occur, none of which were successful. While Rümelin indulged her husband in many of his masochistic requests, due in large part because of her dependence on him to financially support her and her children, she steadfastly refused to cuckold him. Rümelin's refusal to succumb to Sacher-Masoch's cuckolding fantasies was one of the causes of their separation and her subsequent descent into poverty.The term has acquired additional meanings within
certain sub-cultures, referring to couples wherein the female is
dominant
and she takes on additional partners, while the male takes on a
submissive
role where he is monogamous to her, or only becoming involved
sexually when it is felt to be emotionally supportive of her and
her lover, or remaining altogether chaste.
The wife who enjoys cuckoldry is sometimes
referred to as a hotwife.
In a broader context, the contrast between a cuckold and the
additional male participant is sometimes used to summarize an
individual's personality or behavior and the variability commonly
seen in male libidos; the cuckold or beta male suggesting a lack of
virility or smaller phallus and the additional male participant or
alpha
male representing virility, potency, a larger phallus,
fertility, masculinity, strength and a sense of confidence in the
ease with which he may sexually possess another man's wife.
Cuckolding among female-dominant couples differs
from the original definition of cuckolding in that many of these
men are willing to be cuckolded by their wives, sometimes as part
of the their sexual
fantasy and sometimes because they gain genuine sexual arousal
through being humiliated
by his wife being better sexually fulfilled with a potentially
superior male. In some cases the husband may instigate and nurture
his wife's sexual infidelity, raising the question of who is truly
in control. This is a common theme in letters to erotica magazines
and online sites which focus on cuckoldry.
In most modern cases of cuckolding, the husband
usually finds pleasure through that of his wife and they (the wife
and extramarital participant) may both enjoy attempting to actively
include him in the act of cuckolding as much as possible through
serving her. Some common themes include praising her appearance,
attempting to stimulate her sexually at the same time as the
additional participant, and generally being engrossed in her
enjoyment.
Some additional variations might include grooming
his wife for her date, or cleaning up the house while the wife is
on her date. Also, the husband may prepare the wife's sexual
partner by performing oral sex on him,
as to show further humiliation and/or where his
place is in the arrangement.
It may be the case that husband will encourage
his wife to be impregnated by another man. Another man breeding his
wife and for the wife to accept the semen of another stranger
without the use of birth control is a variation of the
cuckolding.
Popularity of cuckolding
Cuckolding has grown in recent years to quite a large subculture with many websites and message boards on the subject.Cuckolding as a dominant voyeuristic act
While the word origin and most historic accounts define the cuckold husband as being submissive, powerless and/or in need of humiliation to receive stimulation, contemporary practice suggests the possibility of something altogether different. Rather than passively acceding to the infidelity and desires of an errant wife, this cuckold is more in keeping with the male partners defined in polyamorous, open, or swinging relationships.In this manifestation, the cuckold is a
consummate voyeur who derives great pleasure from seeing his "hot
wife" or partner being pleasured and serviced by another male(s).
Although he assumes a submissive role and will often assist during
the course of the sex act, the "cuckold husband" may actually be
the controlling, dominant party in the relationship. He may invite,
encourage, and initiate consideration of the practice with his
partner, and may be the one to make arrangements and approve how,
when and with whom his wife may have the intended encounter.
Often, the excitement of the encounter with third
parties is followed by more sex play between the relationship
partners. The encounter becomes an aphrodisiac, helping to initiate
and enhance further sex play between them, as visions of the
encounter are revisited and replayed during subsequent love making
sessions. It is quite common among swinger couples. Many start out
in the swinging lifestyle and branch out into the cuckold
lifestyle. As they find that the male partner much prefers to share
his mate with others rather than have intercourse with other
females.
Cuckquean
The term "cuckold" is exclusively used for a male whose wife takes other partners; a woman whose husband strays in such fashion is known as a cuckquean. There are cases of women who enjoy being cuckqueaned, although they are probably less common than male cuckoldry.See also
References
cuckold in Danish: Hanrej
cuckold in German: Hahnrei
cuckold in Finnish: Aisankannattaja
cuckold in French: Cuckolding
cuckold in Italian: Cuckold
cuckold in Dutch: Cuckolding
cuckold in Japanese: 寝取られ