ChatterBank12 mins ago
Mistress and Missis
When did the term Mistress ( for a married or mature lady) cease to be used and the term Missis start? and why?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Our friends at Take Our Word For It tell us around 1828.
As to the reasoning; "...It (the term Mrs.)is simply an abbreviation of the word mistress, which used to be pronounced "mistress" and was a title of courtesy. The contracted form of the word, pronounced "missus", became attached to the abbreviation, and using mistress (pronounced "mistress") as a title of courtesy fell out of disuse. It was most certainly by 1828 that the "missus" title was the only pronunciation of the word mistress and of its abbreviation Mrs..."
As to the reasoning; "...It (the term Mrs.)is simply an abbreviation of the word mistress, which used to be pronounced "mistress" and was a title of courtesy. The contracted form of the word, pronounced "missus", became attached to the abbreviation, and using mistress (pronounced "mistress") as a title of courtesy fell out of disuse. It was most certainly by 1828 that the "missus" title was the only pronunciation of the word mistress and of its abbreviation Mrs..."
The fact that mistress came to mean a kept woman some time in the later 19th century is just one of those examples of how a langauge evolves. Meanings change over decades / centuries -'naughty' was pretty damn vile in Shakespeare's time; and my son in law nearly died when I asked him to 'bone the chicken' recently.....oh dearie, I did not realise that one.
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