ENGLISH
REFERENCE

cuckold

n.
C2 Proficiency UK //kˈʌkəʊld// cuck·old

n. a man who is tricked into thinking he is the father of a child, but the real father is someone else. It is a very rude and offensive word.

n. a man who is deceived into believing he is the biological father of a child, while the actual father is another man. Highly offensive and derogatory in modern usage.


CONTEXTUAL

In some historical contexts, a man who was a cuckold might be mocked or ostracized by his community.

COMPLEX

The play explores the psychological trauma of a man who discovers he is a cuckold, highlighting the social stigma and personal betrayal associated with such a revelation.

Synonyms
Origin

From Middle English cokolde, cokewold, cockewold, kukwald, kukeweld, from Old French cucuault; a compound of cucu (“cuckoo”) and Old French -auld. The word references the behavior of cuckoo birds where they lay their eggs in another bird’s nest. Cucu is either a directly derived onomatopoeic derivative of the cuckoo's call, or from Latin cucūlus. Latin cucūlus is a compound of onomatopoeic cucu (compare Late Latin cucus) and the diminutive suffix -ulus. Old French -auld is from Frankish -wald (similar suffixes are used in some personal names within other Germanic languages as well; compare English Harold, for instance), a suffixal use of Frankish wald (“wielder, ruler, leader”), from Proto-Germanic waldaz (compare German Gewalt, from the related waldą (“power, might”)), from waldaną (“to rule”), from Proto-Indo-European h₂welh₁- (“to be strong; to rule”). Appears in Middle English in noun form circa 1250 as cokewald. First known use of the verb form is 1589.

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