nibling
English
Etymology
Coined by linguist Samuel E. Martin in 1951[1] from nephew/niece by analogy with sibling.
Pronunciation
Noun
nibling (plural niblings)
- (uncommon) The child of one's sibling or of one's sibling-in-law (in other words, one's niece or nephew), especially in the plural or as a gender-neutral term.
- 1989 November, Gacs, Women Anthropologists: Selected Biographies, University of Illinois Press
- She was close to her family, particularly her younger “siblings and niblings.”
- 1998 May, D.J. Kruger, Relative worth across disparate types of assistance [1]
- Kin selection was strongest for choices between sibling and friend, decreasing across sibling vs. nibling, nibling vs. friend, and nibling vs. cousin.
- 1999 June, Jay Miller, Lushootseed Culture and the Shamanic Odyssey, University of Nebraska Press
- Most distinctive of the system, therefore, were the two terms for parental siblings and for niblings, which occurred only among the Salish and neighboring Southern Nootkans.
- 2005 February, N. J. Enfield, "The Body as a Cognitive Artifact in Kinship Representations", Current Anthropology, Volume 46, Number 1
- Cousins are informally referred to by the same terms used for siblings, but officially one has an aunt/uncle-nibling relationship with one's cousins
- 2005 June 1, Sean M Theriault, The Power Of The People, Ohio State University Press
- But, it is my niblings2 who taught me how to love.
- 1989 November, Gacs, Women Anthropologists: Selected Biographies, University of Illinois Press
Related terms
Translations
a nephew or niece
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References
- ^ Conklin, Harold C., "Ethnogenealogical Method", in Explorations in Cultural Anthropology: Essays in Honor of George Peter Murdock, W. H. Goodenough, ed., McGraw-Hill, New York, 1964