English

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Etymology

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Blend of auntuncle.

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Noun

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auncle (plural auncles)

  1. (rare) Used especially as a gender-neutral term: the sibling or sibling-in-law of one's parent.
    Synonym: pibling
    Hyponyms: aunt, uncle
    • 1957, Die Welt des Orients, volume 2, page 495:
      By cross-cousin marriage, the parents-in-law are auncles (mother’s brother, father’s sister), but since we appear to have a Lukian term nere for parents-in-law but another, tuhe, for auncles, the Lukian relationship terms do not seem to be based upon a cross-cousin system.
    • 1974, Mind, page 221:
      And if we are considering all logical possibilities (or anyway all that we can manage to think up), and then assigning equal initial a priori probabilities to each, then should we not divide those having siblings with a child into uncles, aunts, auncles′, auncles″, auncles‴,…, etc., ad infinitum, where we distinguish between the aunclesn(‴…) in whatever way we care to imagine?
    • 2018, Lark Westerly, The Kissing Ring, eXtasy Books, →ISBN, page 359:
      “Do you think we might have more than one child?” he ventured. After all, she was the one who’d have to bear them. / “Yes, I think so. You know the way Mum and LeeLee are, and Kris and Alex. Maybe a bit closer together might be good though, so we don’t end up with auncles only a little bit older than nevvies.” / “What and which?” / “Auncles?” / “And neivies” / Her face cleared. “Oh—you don’t use those words. They’re like sibling or parent. Non-specific.”

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