feme covert
English
WOTD – 16 August 2011
Etymology
From Anglo-Norman feme (“woman”) covert (“covered, protected”).
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /fɛmˈkʌvət/
Noun
feme covert (plural femes covert or femes coverts)
- (law, now chiefly historical) A married woman.
- 1817, Walter Scott, Rob Roy, IX:
- ‘you, Diana Vernon, spinstress, not being a femme couverte, and being a convict popish recusant, are bound to repair to your own dwelling, and that by the nearest way, under penalty of being held felon to the king [...].’
- 1851, Thomas W Waterman, American Chancery Digest, volume II:
- A deed of a feme covert, to be valid, must be executed by the husband also.
- 1986, Marylynn Salmon, Women and the Law of Property in Early America:
- Connecticut courts failed to recognize feme couvert property rights until 1723, when the legislature finally passed an act significantly reforming the law on conveyancing.
- 1817, Walter Scott, Rob Roy, IX:
Related terms
- feme sole
- feme sole merchant
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