English edit

Etymology edit

From the given name Philander, used as a name for flirtatious characters in several 18th century stories, from Ancient Greek Φίλανδρος (Phílandros), name of the mythological son of the nymph Acacallis and the god Apollo. Semantically disconnected from the adjective φίλανδρος (phílandros, loving one’s husband; excessively attracted to males, slutty, boy crazy).

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

philander (plural philanders)

  1. A lover.
  2. A South American opossum, bare-tailed woolly opossum, of species Caluromys philander (syn. Didelphis philander).
  3. (obsolete) A greater bilby, an Australian marsupial of species Macrotis lagotis (syn. Perameles lagotis).

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Further reading edit

Verb edit

philander (third-person singular simple present philanders, present participle philandering, simple past and past participle philandered)

  1. (intransitive) To woo women; to play the male flirt.

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