English edit

Etymology edit

From Latin uxor (wife) + local.

Adjective edit

uxorilocal (not comparable)

  1. (anthropology) Matrilocal.
    • 1969, Georges Perec, translated by Gilbert Adair, A Void:
      In Gogni (Chad) a Sokoro, clad in his traditional tunic, a tunic as long as a raglan coat such as a snobbishly insular Parisian might sport whilst on safari, paid a visit to a son of his who was living in Mokulu as a willing victim of an unusual (and, until now, unknown) marital status constituting a paradoxical - or, as anthropologists say, "uxorilocal" - form of subjugation.

Derived terms edit

French edit

Adjective edit

uxorilocal (feminine uxorilocale, masculine plural uxorilocaux, feminine plural uxorilocales)

  1. uxorilocal

Further reading edit