revirgination

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

revirginate +‎ -ion

Noun[edit]

revirgination (countable and uncountable, plural revirginations)

  1. The restoration of virginity.
    • 1996, Winifred Bryan Horner, Life Writing, →ISBN, page 241:
      Steinem had, on arriving in India, "revirginated" herself, as she would later put it. Her practice of revirgination in India — that is, of allowing the assumption that she was a virgin — had to do both with the protection virginity offered and with the Toledo knowledge that once a woman "lost" her virginity ...
    • 2004, Jill Conner Browne, God Save the Sweet Potato Queens, →ISBN, page 158:
      The time it takes for revirgination to occur varies from woman to woman. Some might revirginate in a matter of weeks, while for others it might take months.
    • 2012, Janet Adelman, Suffocating Mothers, →ISBN:
      For their sexual bodies will always be dangerous, the sign of the fall and original sin, the "disease that's in my flesh"(King Lear, 2.3.224), "the imposition.../Hereditary ours" (The Winter's Tale, 1.2.74-75): as they enter into sexuality, the virgins -- Cressida, Desdemona, Imogen -- will be transformed into whores, their whoredom acted out in the imaginations of their nearest and dearest; and the primary antidote to their power will be the excision of their sexual bodies, the terrible revirginations that Othello performs on Desdemona, and Shakespeare on Cordelia.
    • 2017, Marie-Claire Foblets, Michele Graziadei, Alison Dundes Renteln, Personal Autonomy in Plural Societies: A Principle and its Paradoxes, →ISBN:
      Alison Dundes Renteln's chapter (Chapter 14) shows how women seeking hymenoplasty (revirgination surgery) are sometimes met with resistance from their own physicians.