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May 1, 2009
This week's theme
Words for him and her

This week's words
maritorious
patrocliny
misogyny
materfamilias
pseudandry

This week's comments
AWADmail 357

Next week's theme
Forgotten positives
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A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Garg

pseudandry

PRONUNCIATION:
(su-DAN-dree)

MEANING:
noun: The use of a male name as a pseudonym by a woman.

NOTES:
Many women wrote under male pen names because in the 18th and 19th centuries it was considered scandalous for a woman to write a book. The English novelist Mary Ann Evans wrote as George Eliot. Also, in olden times, people didn't take a woman's writing seriously.
The counterpart of pseudandry is pseudogyny where a man takes a woman's name as a pseudonym. The rationale here is that people expect certain genres, such as romance, to be written by women.

ETYMOLOGY:
From Greek pseudo (false) + andro (male).

USAGE:
"The first volume contains a short commentary by Dagon Khin Khin Lay in which she revealed her pseudandry and confessed that although she wrote these stories she did not believe in things supernatural."
Dagon Khin Khin Lay's Pseudandry; Myanmar Perspectives; 2000.

A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
To be patriotic, hate all nations but your own; to be religious, all sects but your own; to be moral, all pretences but your own. -Lionel Strachey, writer and translator (1864-1927)

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