noun phrase General Slang

Boston marriage

· noun phrase · lesbian

Two women living together long-term, independent of men — Victorian-era partnership.

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Definitions

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A 19th- and early-20th-century term for two unmarried women sharing a home and a life, financially independent of any man. Some were romantic, some weren't — the phrase let polite society leave that unspoken. It got its name from Henry James's 1886 novel The Bostonians, which centers on exactly this kind of arrangement, though James never used the words himself. His own sister Alice lived one. Common among suffragists and the early college-educated set.

“Two spinster schoolteachers, one house, forty years — the neighbours called it a Boston marriage and asked no further.”
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Boston marriage In A Sentence

Two spinster schoolteachers, one house, forty years — the neighbours called it a Boston marriage and asked no further.

Origin & Usage

Late 19th century, associated with Henry James's novel 'The Bostonians' (1886); James's sister Alice lived in such a partnership.

Variants Boston marriages

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