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AnotherSteveFromNZ t1_j2bxyv2 wrote

Historically infant and childbirth deaths were very common. Only recently in human history has this changed, so there were no words developed for this incidence. It’s like how there is no words for people with two hands. It’s such a regular occurrence that it’s expected so there was never a need to develop vocabulary for it. We’re talking about A few hundred years ago.

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space_cvnts OP t1_j2dm3ls wrote

And isn’t it just something that’s natural. Which brings me back to losing a parent before a child is the natural way of things so there’s no word for it?

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AnotherSteveFromNZ t1_j2e8sk7 wrote

It wasn’t natural a couple of hundred years ago. The reverse was the case.

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space_cvnts OP t1_j2byrm3 wrote

But what about with widows and stuff? that was pretty common too.

And a person with two hands is called ambidextrous. Doesn’t it mean having two hands, having two hands that work equally well, etc

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Naive_Pay_7066 t1_j2dh940 wrote

Widow or widower is primarily used to describe marital status - single, married, divorced, widowed

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space_cvnts OP t1_j2dlxpx wrote

What? It describes a man or woman whose spouse has died and they haven’t remarried.

You are not a widow/er just because you haven’t married.

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space_cvnts OP t1_j2dlyo7 wrote

That’s what bachelor and bachelorette are for.

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