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incel

American  
[in-sel] / ˈɪnˌsɛl /

noun

  1. a member of an online subculture of men who want to have sex but are unable to find sexual partners, typically blaming women or hating people who are sexually successful (often used attributively).

    Perhaps unsurprisingly, contemplation and discussion of suicide features prominently on incel forums.


Etymology

Origin of incel

First recorded in 1990–95; earlier INVCEL, short for involuntarily celibate

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.

"I think I might be an incel."

From BBC

"The incel line doesn't sum the play up at all," says Freeman.

From BBC

In fact, the 35-year-old actor says he finds it "reductive how society pigeonholes a piece of art straight away", referencing how some people have focused too much on the incel culture aspect of the play rather than "seeing it as two people talking very openly".

From BBC

She acknowledges young people now are exposed to far more than readers were in the 1990s or 2000s, with conversations about misogyny, online abuse and even incel culture filtering down into classrooms.

From BBC

"If I were to put something as troubling as the whole incel thing into a children's book, it would only ever be implied," she explains.

From BBC