“Bondmaid. It came back to me then, and I realized that the words most often used to define us were words that describe our function in relation to others. Even the most benign words - maiden, wife, mother - told the world whether we were virgins or not. What was the male equivalent of maiden? I could not think of it. What was the male equivalent of Mrs., of whore, of common scold? I looked out the window towards the scriptorium, the place where the definitions of all these words were being bedded down. Which words would define me? Which would be used to judge or contain? I was no maiden, yet I was no man’s wife. And I had no desire to be.” InspiringFeminismDefinitionsWomen EmpowermentFeminist LiteratureWords And Meanings Book:The Dictionary of Lost Words Source: The Dictionary of Lost Words
“Menstruosity was the condition of being menstruous. And menstruous had once meant horribly filthy or polluted. Menstruous. Like monstrous. It came closest to explaining how I felt. Lizzie had called it “The Curse". She had never heard of menstruation and laughed when I said it.” WomenFeminismDefinitionsFemininityMenstruationVaginas Book:The Dictionary of Lost Words Source: The Dictionary of Lost Words