English edit

Etymology edit

Blend of female +‎ machismo.

Noun edit

femismo (uncountable)

  1. (informal, rare) Exaggerated, stubborn, or aggressive femininity; female machismo.
    • 1996 October 13, westel [username], “Re: May/December Emotional Facelifts”, in alt.support.divorce[1] (Usenet):
      All feminists' talk about a woman's superior ability to identify and express their feelings is just that, TALK. It's just more femismo designed to inflate the deflated self-esteems of mean spirited women.
    • 1998 July 7, Epona [username], “first time post”, in alt.support.anxiety-panic[2] (Usenet):
      i'm not doing any meds. perhaps it's my femismo that keeps me saying no to meds, perhaps it's that i don't want to mask other things.
    • 2000, Marilyn Maxwell, Male Rage, Female Fury: Gender and Violence in American Fiction, University Press of America, published 2000, →ISBN, page 117:
      Do these women, like Damon Cross in Wright's The Outsider or Bigger Thomas in Native Son, succeed in establishing their own autonomy only through violence, forging a "femismo" or female counterpart to the "machismo" brutality of a Mailer protagonist?
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:femismo.

Coordinate terms edit

Translations edit

Portuguese edit

Etymology edit

From fêmea +‎ -ismo. Formed by analogy with machismo.

Noun edit

femismo m (plural femismos)

  1. female chauvinism, misandry

Coordinate terms edit

Related terms edit

Further reading edit