wedlock
English
Etymology
From Middle English wedlok, wedlocke (“wedlock, marriage, matrimony”), from Old English wedlāc (“marriage vow, pledge, plighted troth, wedlock”). By surface analysis, wed + -lock.
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈwɛd.lɒk/
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈwɛd.lɑk/
Audio (US): (file) - Rhymes: -ɒk
Noun
wedlock (countable and uncountable, plural wedlocks)
- The state of being married.
- 1871, Thomas Meehan, editor, Gardener's monthly and horticulturist:
- If I were about to marry, I should try it; that is, if I were a student of girldom with a view to wedlock for in truth, I am a marrying man.
- 1906, William Henry Schofield, English Literature:
- Nothing Jesus Christ more quemeth (pleaseth) Than love in wedlock where men it yemeth (keepeth);
- (obsolete) A wife; a married woman.
- 1596, Edmund Spenser, “Book V, Canto IV”, in The Faerie Queene. […], London: […] [John Wolfe] for William Ponsonbie, →OCLC:
- that lovely payre, / Enlincked fast in wedlockes loyall bond, / Bold Marinell with Florimell the fayre […]
- 1601, Ben Jonson, The Poetaster:
- Which of these is thy Wedlock, Menelaus? thy Hellen? thy Lucrece? that we may do her Honour; mad Boy?
- 1643, John Milton, Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce:
- What is it then but that desire which God put into Adam in Paradise before he knew the sin of incontinence; that desire which God saw it was not good that man should be left alone to burn in; the desire and longing to put off an unkindly solitarines by uniting another body, but not without a fit soule to his in the cheerfull society of wedlock.
Derived terms
Related terms
Translations
married woman — see wife