English edit

 
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Etymology edit

From about 1215. Origin uncertain. The variant ducking stool is a later (from 1597) corruption.

Noun edit

cucking stool (plural cucking stools)

  1. (historical) A kind of chair to which a person (such as a scold or dishonest tradesman) was fastened in order to be punished and socially humiliated, usually by being pelted and hooted at by a mob in front of their own house, but sometimes being taken to water and ducked.
    • 1825 June 22, [Walter Scott], Tales of the Crusaders. [], volume I (The Betrothed), Edinburgh: [] [James Ballantyne and Co.] for Archibald Constable and Co.; London: Hurst, Robinson, and Co., →OCLC, page 173:
      [] while in the same breath the Fleming exclaimed, “Beware the cucking-stool, Dame Scant o' Grace,” while he conducted the noble youth across the court.
    • 1996, Judith M. Bennett, Ale, Beer, and Brewsters in England: Women's Work in a Changing World, 1300-1600, Oxford University Press, page 105:
      Whenever officers resorted to corporal punishment of brewers, then, it seems that cucking-stools were sometimes reserved for brewsters (as well as for other female offenders). Yet if the cucking-stool was more a female punishment and the pillory (or other fates) more often reserved for men, the distinctions in the middle ages were still fluid, and their significance is hard to gauge.
    • 2016, Brian Weiser, “Chapter 29: The Shamings of Falstaff”, in R. Malcolm Smuts, editor, The Oxford Handbook of the Age of Shakespeare, Oxford University Press, page 515:
      Orders to build cucking stools riddle local records.14 In Calne in 1675 the view of the hundred ordered the Lord of Calne to build a stool or face a forty-shilling fine.15 In 1684 the view raised the fine to thirty pounds, but by 1687 Calne still lacked a cucking stool.

Synonyms edit

See also edit