aunt

[ant, ahnt] /ænt, ɑnt/
noun
1.
the sister of one's father or mother.
2.
the wife of one's uncle.
3.
Chiefly New England and South Midland U.S. (used as a term of respectful address to an older woman who is not related to the speaker).
4.
Slang. an aging male homosexual.
Origin
1250-1300; Middle English aunte < Anglo-French, for Old French ante < Latin amita father's sister, old feminine past participle of amāre to love, i.e., beloved
Related forms
auntlike, adjective
Can be confused
ant, aunt.
Pronunciation note
The usual vowel of aunt in the United States is the [a] /æ/ (Show IPA) of rant except in New England and eastern Virginia, where it is commonly the “New England broad a, ” a vowel similar to French [a] /a/ and having a quality between the [a] /æ/ of hat and the [ah] /ɑ/ of car. The vowel [ah] /ɑ/ itself is also used. In New England and eastern Virginia [ah] /ɑ/ or the [a] /a/ -like sound occur in aunt in the speech of all social groups, even where a “broad a ” is not used in words like dance and laugh. Elsewhere, the “broader” a is chiefly an educated pronunciation, fostered by the schools with only partial success (“Your relative isn't an insect, is she?”), and is sometimes regarded as an affectation. Aunt with the vowel of paint is chiefly South Midland United States and is limited to folk speech.
The [a] /æ/ pronunciation of aunt was brought to America before British English developed the [ah] /ɑ/ in such words as aunt, dance, and laugh. In American English, [ah] /ɑ/ is most common in the areas that maintained the closest cultural ties with England after the [ah] /ɑ/ pronunciation developed there in these words.
Examples from the web for aunt
  • He was forced to move to smaller and meaner lodgings with his surviving aunt.
  • Her older sister ella, was not only her sister, but her aunt by marriage.
  • As a boy , he was frequently spanked by his aunt connie with the back of a hairbrush.
British Dictionary definitions for aunt

aunt

/ɑːnt/
noun (often capital, esp as a term of address)
1.
a sister of one's father or mother
2.
the wife of one's uncle
3.
a term of address used by children for any woman, esp for a friend of the parents
4.
my aunt!, my sainted aunt!, an exclamation of surprise or amazement
Word Origin
C13: from Old French ante, from Latin amita a father's sister
Word Origin and History for aunt
n.

c.1300, from Anglo-French aunte, Old French ante (Modern French tante, from a 13c. variant), from Latin amita "paternal aunt" diminutive of *amma a baby-talk word for "mother" (cf. Greek amma "mother," Old Norse amma "grandmother," Middle Irish ammait "old hag," Hebrew em, Arabic umm "mother").

Extended senses include "an old woman, a gossip" (1580s); "a procuress" (1670s); and "any benevolent woman," in American English, where auntie was recorded since c.1790 as "a term often used in accosting elderly women." The French word also has become the word for "aunt" in Dutch, German (Tante), and Danish. Swedish has retained the original Germanic (and Indo-European) custom of distinguishing aunts by separate terms derived from "father's sister" (faster) and "mother's sister" (moster). The Old English equivalents were faðu and modrige. In Latin, too, the formal word for "aunt on mother's side" was matertera. Some languages have a separate term for aunts-in-law as opposed to blood relations.

Slang definitions & phrases for aunt

aunt

noun
  1. The madame of a brothel
  2. An elderly male homosexual