bawd
English
Alternative forms
- baud
- baude
Etymology
From Middle English bawde, baude, noun form of Old French baud (“bold, lively, jolly, gay”), from Old Low Frankish *bald (“bold, proud”), from Proto-Germanic *balþaz (“strong, bold”), from Proto-Indo-European *bʰel- (“to inflate, swell”). Cognate with Old High German bald (“bold, bright”), Old English beald (“bold, brave, confident, strong”). More at bold.
Noun
bawd (plural bawds)
- (now archaic or historical) A person who keeps a house of prostitution, or procures women for prostitution; a procurer, a madame.
- 1717, Ned Ward, British Wonders:
- As Whores decay'd and past their Labours, / Turn Bawds, and so assist their Neighbours.
- 2012, Faramerz Dabhoiwala, The Origins of Sex, Penguin 2013, p. 76:
- Compared with their opponents, bawds and their associates increasingly had deeper pockets and greater confidence in manipulating the law.
- 1717, Ned Ward, British Wonders:
- A lewd person.
Derived terms
Welsh
Etymology
From Middle Welsh mawd < Proto-Celtic *mā-to- < Proto-Indo-European *mē-. Compare Breton meud and Cornish meusva.
Noun
bawd m (plural bodiau)
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