a man who does household work or spends time with women; historically, a derogatory term for a man who was seen as overly domestic or interested in women's affairs.
From 'cot' or 'cote' (possibly meaning 'homebody') combined with 'quean' (a woman or girl). The term emerged in Middle English with insulting connotations about masculinity.
The existence of a derogatory term for men doing household work reveals how deeply gender roles were embedded in medieval society—doing 'women's work' could damage a man's reputation, something that thankfully has changed dramatically!
Cotquean (14th-16th century) was a pejorative term for a man who engaged in domestic work or 'women's tasks.' The term weaponized gender norms by mocking male departure from rigid roles while normalizing women's unpaid labor.
Avoid—this word carries only derogatory historical baggage with no legitimate modern use.
["homemaker","domestic worker","caregiver"]
The dismissal of 'cotqueans' reflected the systematic undervaluation of domestic labor; women who performed identical work were simply expected to do so without recognition or wages.
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