founding mother
English
WOTD – 8 March 2022
Etymology
From founding (“who or that founds (establishes, starts) or founded”) + mother, modelled after founding father.
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˌfaʊndɪŋ ˈmʌðə/
- (General American) IPA(key): /ˌfaʊndɪŋ ˈmʌðɚ/
Audio (General American): (file)
- Rhymes: -ʌðə(ɹ)
- Hyphenation: found‧ing moth‧er
Noun
founding mother (plural founding mothers)
- A woman who founded (established or started) something.
- 1984 December 29, Michael Bronski, “Hot Off The Presses”, in Gay Community News, volume 12, number 25, page 10:
- Finally there is a comprehensive, well-documented life of founding mother Elizabeth Cady Stanton: In Her Own Right, by Elisabeth Griffith. Griffith focuses upon both the life and the social atmosphere which led to the beginnings of the first wave of American feminism.
- 1986, Johnnetta B. Cole, All American Women: Lines that Divide, Ties that Bind, →ISBN:
- She (Audrey Lorde) is a member of the founding collective of Kitchen Table: Women of Color Press and a founding mother of SISA, Sisterhood in Support of Sisters in South Africa.
- 2003 April 21, Sara Delamont, Feminist Sociology, SAGE, →ISBN:
- There could even be a case made for treating Jane Harrison as a founding mother of social science (Beard, 2000).
- 2020 October 21, Kathleen Gallagher Elkins, Mary, Mother of Martyrs: How Motherhood Became Self-Sacrifice in Early Christianity, Wipf and Stock Publishers, →ISBN:
- The initial founding mother, Eve, becomes a paradigmatic figure in later Jewish and Christian exegesis […]
Related terms
Translations
woman who founded something
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