Fornication

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Fornication is generally consensual sexual intercourse between two people not married to each other. For many people, the term carries an overtone of moral or religious disapproval (living in sin), but the significance of sexual acts to which the term is applied varies between religions, societies and cultures. The definition is often disputed. In modern usage, the term is often replaced with a more judgment-neutral term like extramarital sex.

Etymology and usage

Prostitutes in ancient Rome waited for their customers out of the rain under vaulted ceilings, and the Latin word for vaults, fornix, became a euphemism for brothels, and the Latin verb fornicare referred to a man visiting a brothel. [Note 1]. The first recorded use in English is in the "Cursor Mundi", c. 1300; the "Oxford English Dictionary" (OED) records a figurative use as well: "The forsaking of God for idols".

Fornicated as an adjective is still used in botany, meaning "arched" or "bending over" (as in a leaf). John Milton plays on the double meaning of the word in "The Reason of Church-Government Urged against Prelaty" (1642): "[She] gives up her body to a mercenary whordome under those fornicated arches which she calls Gods house."

The Greek term porneia (πο"νεία), meaning "illicit sexual intercourse", was translated as "fornication" in the 1611 King James Version of the bible and has also been translated as whoredom, sexual immorality or simply immorality.

Notes

  1. These "brothels" advertised using pornography
More information is available at [ Wikipedia:Fornication ]
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