English
Etymology
From Middle English houswyf, housewif, huswijf, equivalent to house + wife; a doublet of hussy, which it was long distinguished from and displaced due to gradual negative connotation (see Online Etymology Dictionary entry). Cognate with German Hausweib.
Pronunciation
- Person
- IPA(key): /ˈhaʊs.waɪf/
- (obsolete, dialectal, poetic) IPA(key): /ˈhʌzwaɪf/, /ˈhʌz(w)ɪf/
- Bag
Noun
housewife (plural housewives or housewifes) (see notes below about plurals)
- (plural "housewives") A woman whose main employment is homemaking, maintaining the upkeep of her home and tending to household affairs; often, such a woman whose sole [unpaid] employment is homemaking.
- Synonym: (archaic) henhussy
- Hypernym: homemaker
- Coordinate term: househusband
- 2000, Uli Kusch, "Mr. Torture", Helloween, The Dark Ride
Mr Torture sells pain / To the housewives in Spain / He knows just what they crave / Mr Torture
- (plural "housewives") The wife of a householder; the mistress of a family; the female head of a household.
- (plural "housewifes") A little case or bag for materials used in sewing, and for other articles of female work.
- Synonym: hussy
1828, JT Smith, Nollekens and His Times, Century Hutchinson, published 1986, page 246:It was a housewife, containing needles, a bodkin, and thread; ‘and, do you know,’ added he, ‘it was the most useful thing she could have given me, for it lasted all the time I was at Rome to mend my clothes with […] .’
1852, Tom Taylor, Charles Reade, Masks and Faces, act II:Woffington's housewife, made by herself, homely to the eye, but holds everything in the world
1997, David L. Phillips, A Soldier's Story, MetroBooks, →ISBN, page 61:The "soldier's housewife" was a small sewing kit that was carried to make timely repairs to clothing and equipment.
- (plural "housewives", obsolete) A worthless woman; a hussy.
Derived terms
Translations
female head of household
- Albanian: amvisë (sq) f
- Arabic: رَبَّة مَنْزِل f (rabbat manzil), رَبَّة بَيْت f (rabbat bayt), رَبَّة أُسْرَة f (rabbat ʔusra)
- Armenian: տնային տնտեսուհի (tnayin tntesuhi), տանտիկին (hy) (tantikin)
- Azerbaijani: evdar qadın
- Bashkir: хужабикә (xujabikə)
- Basque: etxekoandre (eu)
- Belarusian: ха́тняя гаспады́ня f (xátnjaja haspadýnja)
- Bengali: গৃহবধূ (bn) (grihobodhu), গৃহিণী (bn) (grihini), ঘরণী (ghoroni)
- Bulgarian: домаки́ня (bg) f (domakínja), къ́щница f (kǎ́štnica)
- Burmese: အိမ်ရှင်မ (my) (imhrangma.)
- Catalan: mestressa de casa (ca) f
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 主婦 / 主妇 (zh) (zhǔfù), 家庭婦女 / 家庭妇女 (jiātíng fùnǚ), 家庭主婦 / 家庭主妇 (zh) (jiātíng zhǔfù)
- Chukchi: гыпиԓьын (gypiḷʹyn)
- Crimean Tatar: ev bikesi
- Czech: hospodyňka f, žena v domácnosti f
- Danish: husmor c
- Dutch: huisvrouw (nl) f
- Esperanto: dommastrino, domestrino
- Estonian: koduperenaine
- Faroese: matmóðir f, húsfrú f, húsfrúgv f
- Finnish: emäntä (fi), kotirouva (fi), perheenemäntä (fi), kotiäiti (fi)
- French: maîtresse de maison (fr) f, femme au foyer (fr) f, mère au foyer f, garce (fr) f (familiar)
- Georgian: დიასახლისი (diasaxlisi)
- German: Hausfrau (de) f
- Alemannic German: Huusfrau f
- Greek: νοικοκυρά (el) f (noikokyrá), οικοδέσποινα (el) f (oikodéspoina)
- Hebrew: עֲקֶרֶת בַּיִת (he) f (akéret báyit)
- Hindi: गृहिणी (hi) f (gŕhiṇī), घरनी (hi) f (gharnī), घरवाली (hi) f (gharvālī)
- Hungarian: háziasszony (hu)
- Icelandic: húsfrú (is) f, húsmóðir (is) f
- Indonesian: ibu rumah tangga (id), suri rumah
- Irish: bean tí f
- Italian: massaia (it) f, donna di casa f, padrona di casa f, casalinga (it) f
- Japanese: 主婦 (ja) (しゅふ, shufu)
- Kazakh: үй шаруасындағы әйел (üi şaruasyndağy äiel)
- Khmer: ស្រីមេផ្ទះ (srəy mei phtĕəh), គេហសាមិនី (keihaʼsaaminii)
- Korean: 주부(主婦) (ko) (jubu)
- Kurdish:
- Central Kurdish: کابان (kaban)
- Northern Kurdish: bermalî (ku)
- Kyrgyz: үй ээси (üy eesi), үй кожойкеси (üy kojoykesi)
- Lao: ແມ່ເຮືອນ (mǣ hư̄an)
- Latin: domiseda
- Latvian: mājsaimniece f
- Lithuanian: šeimininkė f
- Macedonian: дома́ќинка f (domáḱinka)
- Malay: suri rumah
- Mongolian:
- Cyrillic: гэрийн эзэгтэй (geriin ezegtej)
- Norman: femme dé mênage f
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: husmor (no) m or f
- Nynorsk: husmor f
- Pashto: ماتو f (mātu)
- Persian:
- Iranian Persian: خانُمِ خانِه (xânom-e xâne), زَنِ خانِهدار (zan-e xâne-dâr), خانِهدار (xâne-dâr) (any gender), کَدْبانو (kadbânu)
- Plautdietsch: Husfru f
- Polish: gospodyni domowa (pl) f, pani domu f
- Portuguese: dona de casa (pt) f
- Romanian: gospodină (ro) f, casnică (ro) f
- Russian: домохозя́йка (ru) f (domoxozjájka)
- Scottish Gaelic: bean-taighe f
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: дома̀ћица f, ку̏ћаница f
- Roman: domàćica f, kȕćanica f
- Slovak: gazdiná f
- Slovene: gospodinja (sl) f
- Spanish: ama de casa (es) f, mujer de su casa f, mujer de gobierno f (disused)
- Swedish: husfru (sv) c, husmor (sv) c
- Tagalog: maybahay
- Tajik: соҳибхоназан (sohibxonazan), соҳибаи хона (sohiba-yi xona), зани хонадор (zan-i xonador)
- Tatar: хуҗабикә (xucabikä)
- Thai: แม่บ้าน (mɛ̂ɛ-bâan)
- Turkish: ev kadını (tr), ev hanımı (tr), karı (tr)
- Turkmen: öý hojalykçy, öy bikesi, öý hojalykçy aýal (tk)
- Ukrainian: домогоспода́рка f (domohospodárka)
- Urdu: گَھر والی f (ghar vālī)
- Uyghur: ئائىلە ئايالى (a'ile ayali), ئايال خوجايىن (ayal xojayin), خوجايىن ئايال (xojayin ayal)
- Uzbek: uy bekasi
- Vietnamese: bà nội trợ
- Volapük: domaläd
- Welsh: gwraig tŷ f, gwraig y tŷ f
- Yiddish: באַלעבאָסטע f (baleboste)
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case for materials used in sewing
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: please add this translation if you can
- Finnish: käsityölaukku
- French: trousse de couture f, boîte à ouvrage (fr) f
- Hungarian: varrókészlet (hu), varródoboz (hu)
- Icelandic: húsmóðir (is)
- Indonesian: kotak jahit
- Portuguese: caixa de costura f
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- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.
Translations to be checked
Verb
housewife (third-person singular simple present housewifes, present participle housewifing, simple past and past participle housewifed)
- Alternative form of housewive.
1983 December 10, Jolanta Benal, “The Second Revolution”, in Gay Community News, volume 11, number 21, page 14:Career opportunity […] is the one who never knocks — especially not on the doors of women, who are still hooking, housewifing and hairdressing for their livings.