different between virgin vs deflowering

virgin

English

Etymology

From Middle English virgine, from Old French virgine, from Latin virginem, accusative of virg?.

Pronunciation

  • (General American) IPA(key): /?v?d??n/
  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?v??d??n/
  • Rhymes: -??(?)d??n

Noun

virgin (plural virgins)

  1. A person who has never had sexual intercourse, or sometimes, one who has never engaged in any sexual activity at all. [from mid-14th c.]
  2. (Catholicism, Orthodoxy or historical) Someone vowed to virginity (usually a woman and often a consecrated virgin), or someone who died in defense of their virginity; (especially) one venerated as a saint. [from early 13th c.]
  3. (informal) One who has never used or experienced a specified thing.
    I've never eaten tofu before – you could say I'm a tofu virgin.
  4. Any of several species of gossamer-winged butterflies of the family Lycaenidae.
  5. (entomology) A female insect producing eggs from which young are hatched, though there has been no fecundation by a male; a parthenogenetic insect.

Synonyms

  • (person who has never had sexual intercourse): maiden (dated; used of a woman only), unicorn bait (slang, jocular), virgo intacta (medical term; used of a woman only), vestal

Translations

Adjective

virgin (comparative more virgin, superlative most virgin)

  1. (usually not comparable) In a state of virginity; chaste, not having had sexual intercourse.
    • 1913, DH Lawrence, Sons and Lovers, Penguin 2006, page 294:
      He was now about twenty-three years old, and, though still virgin, the sex instinct that Miriam had over refined for so long now grew particularly strong.
    • 1988, Hubert Monteilhet, Neropolis:
      From their embraces was born the handsome Actaeon, a naive boy, who had less excuse than other men, given that he was her son, for believing her to be a virgin. It's true that he was even more virgin than his mother.
    • 2009, Diarmaid MacCulloch, A History of Christianity, Penguin 2010, page 314:
      Helvidius [] took the plain meaning of scripture to say that Jesus patently had brothers and sisters, so therefore his mother, Mary, had enjoyed a normal family life rather than remaining perpetually virgin.
  2. Of a physical object, untouched.
    • c1611, William Shakespeare, The Tempest, Act 4 Scene 1.
      The white cold virgin snow upon my heart / Abates the ardour of my liver.
    • 1932, Dorothy L Sayers, Have his Carcase, Chapter 1.
      There is something about virgin sand which arouses all the worst instincts of the detective-story writer. One feels an irresisitible impulse to go and make footprints all over it.
  3. Not yet cultivated, explored, or exploited by humans or humans of certain civilizations.
    virgin prairie, a virgin ecosystem, virgin forest
    virgin clay, i.e. clay that has never been fired
    The virgin lands of the Americas were awaiting the Europeans.
    • 1650, Edward Williams, Virginia: More Especially the South Part Thereof:
      The same bounty of Summer, the same milde remission of Winter, with a more virgin and unexhausted soyle being materiall arguments to shew that modesty and truth receive no diminution by the comparison.
  4. Inexperienced.
  5. Of olive oil, obtained by mechanical means, so that the oil is not altered.
    • 2013, Cheryl Forberg, Cooking with Quinoa For Dummies, page 62:
      Wondering how some oil is somehow more virgin than regular virgin olive oil can be a real head-scratcher.
  6. (usually not comparable) Of mixed drinks, not containing alcohol.
    a virgin daiquiri

Synonyms

  • (of a physical object): brand new, pristine, unspoilt, untouched

Translations

Derived terms

References

Anagrams

  • Girvin, Irving, Virnig, riving, viring

Romanian

Alternative forms

  • vergin (popular, dated)

Etymology

Borrowed from Latin virg?, virginem. Compare the doublet vergur?.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /vir?d??in/

Adjective

virgin m or n (feminine singular virgin?, masculine plural virgini, feminine and neuter plural virgine)

  1. virgin, that which has not had sexual intercourse, chaste, maiden, virginal
  2. untouched, clean, stainless, immaculate, pure

Declension

Synonyms

  • cast, fecioar?, fecioresc, feciorelnic, vergur, pur, curat, neatins

Derived terms

  • virgin?
  • virginitate

virgin From the web:

  • what virgin means
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  • what virgin islands are us
  • what virginian invented the reaper
  • what virginia congressional district am i in
  • what virginia lottery is tonight
  • what virginia lottery game is tonight
  • what virginia is known for


deflowering

English

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /d??fla?(w)????(?)/

Verb

deflowering

  1. present participle of deflower

Noun

deflowering (plural deflowerings)

  1. The breaking of the hymen of a virgin.
    • 2005 Muhammad Khalid Masud et al - Dispensing Justice in Islam: Qadis and Their Judgements
      If a midwife testifies that the wound is old, then deflowering may have occurred prior to the husband's initial penetration of his wife.

deflowering From the web:

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