Dictionary Definition
coquetry n : playful behavior intended to arouse
sexual interest [syn: flirt, flirting, flirtation, dalliance, toying]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- Attempts to attract admiration, notice, or love, for the mere gratification of vanity; affectation of amorous tenderness; trifling in love; flirtation.
Quotations
See coquetry/CitationsExtensive Definition
Flirting is a form of human interaction between
two people, expressing a sexual
and/or romantic
interest. It can consist of conversation, body
language, or brief physical contact. It may be one-sided or
reciprocated.
The origin of the word flirt is obscure. The
Oxford
English Dictionary (first edition) associates it with such
onomatopoeic words as flit and flick, emphasizing a lack of
seriousness; on the other hand, it has been attributed to the old
French "Conter fleurette", which means "to (try to) seduce" by the
dropping of flower leaves, that is, "to speak sweet nothings". This
expression is no longer used in French, but the English gallicism to flirt has made
its way and has now become an anglicism.
Flirting is often used as a means of expressing
interest and gauging the other person's interest in courtship, which can continue
into long-term relationships. Alternatively, it may simply be a
prelude to casual sex
with no continuing relationship.
In other situations, it may be done simply for
immediate entertainment, with no intention of developing any
further relationship. This type of flirting sometimes faces
disapproval from others, either because it can be misinterpreted as
more serious, or it may be viewed as "cheating" if the person is
already in a romantic relationship with someone else.
People who flirt may speak and act in a way that
suggests greater intimacy than is generally
considered appropriate to the relationship
(or to the amount of time the two people have known each other),
without actually saying or doing anything that breaches any serious
social norms. One way they accomplish this is to communicate a
sense of playfulness or irony. Double
entendres, with one meaning more formally appropriate and
another more suggestive, may be used.
Flirting may consist of stylized gestures,
language, body
language, postures,
and physiologic
signs. Among these, at least in Western
society, are:
- Eye contact, batting eyelashes, etc.
- "Protean" signals, such as touching one's hair
- Casual touches; such as a woman gently touching a man's arm during conversation
- Smiling suggestively
- Winking
- Sending notes, poems, or small gifts
- Flattery
- Online chat is a common modern tactic, as well as other one-on-one and direct messaging services
- Footsie, the "feet under the table" practice
- Teasing
- Chance meeting
During World War II, anthropologist Margaret
Mead was working in Britain for the British Ministry
of Information and later for the U.S.
Office of War Information, delivering speeches and writing
articles to help the American soldiers better understand the
British civilians, and vice versa.
She observed in the flirtations between the
American soldiers and British women a pattern of misunderstandings
regarding who is supposed to take which initiative. She wrote of
the Americans, "The boy learns to make advances and rely upon the
girl to repulse them whenever they are inappropriate to the state
of feeling between the pair.", as contrasted to the British, where
"the girl is reared to depend upon a slight barrier of
chilliness... which the boys learn to respect, and for the rest to
rely upon the men to approach or advance, as warranted by the
situation." This resulted, for example, in British women
interpreting an American soldier's gregariousness as something more
intimate or serious than he had intended.
Communications theorist Paul
Watzlawick used this situation, where "both American soldiers
and British girls accused one another of being sexually brash", as
an example of differences in "punctuation" in interpersonal
communications. He wrote that courtship in both cultures used
approximately 30 steps from "first eye contact to the ultimate
consummation", but that the sequence of the steps was different.
For example, kissing might be an early step in the American pattern
but a relatively intimate act in the English pattern.
References
External links
- SIRC Guide to Flirting
- Nonverbal Courtship Patterns In Women: Context and Consequences
- Psychology Today - Flirting Fascination –Reviews several studies on flirting
coquetry in Arabic: غزل (فعل)
coquetry in Danish: Flirte
coquetry in Czech: Flirt
coquetry in German: Flirt
coquetry in Spanish: Coqueteo
coquetry in Esperanto: Amindumo
coquetry in French: Flirt
coquetry in Hungarian: Flört
coquetry in Lithuanian: Flirtas
coquetry in Dutch: Flirten
coquetry in Norwegian: Kurtisering
coquetry in Polish: Flirt
coquetry in Portuguese: Flerte
coquetry in Russian: Флирт
coquetry in Simple English: Flirting
coquetry in Finnish: Flirttailu
coquetry in Yiddish: פלירטינג
coquetry in Chinese: 搭訕
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
amorous looks, come-hither look, coquettish
glances, coquettishness, coyness, dabbling, dalliance, dallying, fiddling, flirtation, flirtatiousness,
fooling, fooling around,
goo-goo eyes, idling,
jerking off, kidding around, loitering, messing around,
monkeying, monkeying
around, ogle, piddling, playing, playing around,
pottering, puttering, smattering, tinkering, toying, trifling