adulteress
Americannoun
noun
Usage
What does adulteress mean? An adulteress is a woman who engages in adultery—a consensual sexual relationship or encounter between someone who’s married and a person they’re not married to (who may or may not be married to someone else). Adulteress is a form of the word adulterer, which refers to a person who engages in adultery but does not specify their gender. There is no exclusively male equivalent of adulteress. This reflects the fact that it has been more common throughout history for women to be blamed—and punished—for adulterous relationships than men. Typically, for something to be considered adultery, at least one of the partners must be married. In other words, the adulterers can be two people who are both married to other people, or a married person and a nonmarried person. In any case, the word adulterer can be applied to both people in the adulterous relationship (not just the one who’s married). Adulteress, however, is most often used to refer to a woman who has cheated on her husband. When it happens with someone other than one’s spouse, a long-term relationship (often called an affair), a single sexual encounter, or anything in between can be considered to constitute adultery. In some cases, a relationship may even be considered adultery when it’s nonsexual but intimate (this is sometimes called an emotional affair). The word adultery is especially used in a religious context, in which it’s often considered a sin. It’s also sometimes used in a legal context, such as during divorce proceedings. Adultery is a crime in some places (including in some U. S. states, though people aren’t often charged for it). Adultery is associated with a considerable amount of stigma. The word adulteress is always used negatively and implies a critical judgment of such actions. Example: She’s a serial adulteress who doesn’t even attempt to hide her affairs.
Gender
What's the difference between adulteress and adulterer? See -ess.
Etymology
Origin of adulteress
First recorded in 1350–1400; adulter(er) + -ess; replacing Middle English avoutresse
Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
For at least a century, "Christ and the Adulteress" was mistakenly attributed to Giorgione, so the exhibition's two opening rooms offer a lot to chew on.
From Los Angeles Times • Mar. 21, 2015
He produced a stream of "Vermeers" over the next few years, into the German occupation of the Netherlands, and one of them, Christ and the Adulteress, was bought by Hermann Goring.
From Time Magazine Archive
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G�ring got Christ and the Adulteress in a trade for 173 paintings.
From Time Magazine Archive
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The jury, after 53 minutes, dutifully found Adulteress Rattenbury innocent and Dupe Stoner guilty last week of the murder of "Rats," she being promptly set free and he sentenced to hang.
From Time Magazine Archive
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The first is the "Christ and the Adulteress" of the Glasgow Gallery, the second the "Madonna and Saints" of the Louvre.
From Giorgione by Cook, Herbert
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.