Athena
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin Athena, from Ancient Greek Ἀθηνᾶ (Athēnâ).
Pronunciation
- enPR: ə-thēʹnə, IPA(key): /əˈθiːnə/
- Rhymes: -iːnə
Proper noun
Athena
Derived terms
- Athena Polias
- Athens
Translations
Greek goddess
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Noun
Athena (plural Athenas)
- (feminism, derogatory) A woman who colludes with the patriarchy rather than actively opposing it.
- 1989, Jennifer Barker Woolger, Roger J. Woolger, The goddess within
- The last thing feminist Athenas see about corporate structures, government, or academia is that they are run by benevolent and all-protective fathers.
- 1992, Marilyn Frye, Willful virgin: essays in feminism, 1976-1992, page 141:
- The latter may become either Athenas or feminists. If one gets a certain sort of male sponsorship, becomes a Daddy's girl, one is allowed to function in these vocations of the righteous […]
- 1995, Noretta Koertge (in Skeptical Inquirer, volume 19, number 2, page 42)
- Women who do decide to become scientists find themselves under attack from the self-proclaimed "echt" feminists, who call them "Athenas" and "Queen Bees."
- 1989, Jennifer Barker Woolger, Roger J. Woolger, The goddess within
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