Short description: Female relative who is sibling of one's parent An aunt and her niece in Tigray, Ethiopia. Isabel, Princess Imperial of Brazil (right) with her nephew Prince Pedro Augusto sitting on her lap. At left, Isabel's sister Princess Leopoldina holding her son Prince Augusto Leopoldo, c. 1868 An aunt is a woman who is a sibling of a parent or married to a sibling of a parent. Aunts who are related by birth are second-degree relatives. Alternate terms include auntie or aunty. Children in other cultures and families may refer to the cousins of their parents as aunt or uncle due to the age and generation gap. The word comes from Latin: amita via Old French ante and is a family relationship within an extended or immediate family. The male counterpart of an aunt is an uncle, and the reciprocal relationship is that of a nephew or niece. Aunts by generation ## Contents * 1 Additional terms * 2 Genetics and consanguinity * 3 Cultural variations * 4 Aunts in popular culture * 5 See also * 6 References * 7 External links ## Additional terms * A half-aunt is a half-sister of a parent. * An aunt-in-law is the aunt of one's spouse and is the wife of the uncle of somebody. . * A great-aunt[1][2]/grandaunt[3] (sometimes written grand-aunt[4]) is the sister of one's grandparent. Despite the popular usage of great-aunt, genealogists consider it more correct to use grandaunt for a grandparent's sister to avoid confusion with earlier generations. Similarly, the female siblings of one's great-grandparents are referred to as great-grandaunts.[5] ## Genetics and consanguinity Aunts by birth (sister of a parent) are related to their nieces and nephews by 25%. As half-aunts are related through half-sisters, they are related by 12.5% to their nieces and nephews. Non-consanguineous aunts (female spouse of a relative) are not genetically related to their nieces and nephews. ## Cultural variations In some cultures, such as Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples of Australia, respected senior members of the community, often also referred to as Elders, are addressed as "uncle" (for men) and "aunt" for women, as a mark of seniority and respect, whether related or not,[6][7] such as Aunty Kathy Mills.[8] In several cultures, no single inclusive term describing both a person's kinship to their parental female sibling or parental female in-law exists. Instead, there are specific terms describing a person's kinship to their mother's female sibling, and a person's kinship to their father's female sibling, per the following table: Terms for aunt Language | Mother's sister | Father's sister | | Albanian | teze | hallë Kurdish | Xaltîk (IPA: xɑːltiːk) | Metik (IPA: mɛtɪk) Arabic | خالة (khaleh) | عمّة (ammeh) Hindi | Mausi | Bua Korean | 이모 (Imo) | 고모 (Gomo) Marathi | Mavashi | Aatya Persian | (خاله)khaleh | (عمّه)ammeh Polish | ciotka (diminutive: ciocia) | stryjna (diminutive: stryjenka) Swedish | moster | faster Turkish | teyze | hala ## Aunts in popular culture Aunts in popular culture have not always been portrayed as positive roles. Childless aunts are often subjected to othering in popular culture and presented as exotic or as having a second-best role, with motherhood preferred.[9] Fictional aunts include: * May Parker, the aunt of Spider-Man. * Auntie Mame, title character in the novel and film. * Petunia Dursley, the aunt of the protagonist of Harry Potter by J. K. Rowling. * Vivian Banks, the aunt of the main character in The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air. * Aunt Sally, a character in the Worzel Gummidge books and TV series. * Aunt Em, the aunt of Dorothy Gale in the Oz books and film. * Aunt Spiker and Aunt Sponge, the villainous aunts of James Trotter in James and the Giant Peach. * Diane - The tomboyish aunt of Daniel in Chicago Party Aunt. Aunt Flo is a popular euphemism referring to the menstrual cycle. An agony aunt is a colloquial term for a female advice columnist. ## See also * All pages with titles beginning with Aunt – includes many articles with titles "Aunt [name]." * Auntie (disambiguation) (also includes "Aunty") * Cousin ## References 1. ↑ "Definition of great-aunt in English by Oxford Dictionaries". https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/great-aunt. 2. ↑ "Google Ngram Viewer of relative versions of name". https://books.google.com/ngrams/graph?content=[great+-+aunt],great+aunt,[grand+-+aunt],grandaunt,greataunt,grand+aunt&case_insensitive=on&year_start=1800&year_end=2008&corpus=15&smoothing=10&share=&direct_url=t4;,[great - aunt];,c0;,s0;;great - aunt;,c0;;Great - Aunt;,c0;;Great - aunt;,c0;.t4;,great aunt;,c0;,s0;;great aunt;,c0;;Great Aunt;,c0;;great Aunt;,c0;;Great aunt;,c0;.t4;,[grand - aunt];,c0;,s0;;grand - aunt;,c0;;Grand - aunt;,c0;;Grand - Aunt;,c0;.t4;,grandaunt;,c0;,s0;;grandaunt;,c0;;Grandaunt;,c0;.t4;,greataunt;,c0;,s0;;greataunt;,c0;;Greataunt;,c0;;GreatAunt;,c0;.t4;,grand aunt;,c0;,s0;;grand aunt;,c0;;Grand Aunt;,c0;;grand Aunt;,c0. 3. ↑ "Grandaunt definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary". https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/grandaunt. 4. ↑ "Definition of grand-aunt in English by Oxford Dictionaries". https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/grand-aunt. 5. ↑ "Relationship Chart by Betty Eichhorn". https://www.devonfhs.org.uk/pdfs/tools/eichhorn-rlationship-chart.pdf. 6. ↑ "Communicating with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Audiences". 23 February 2016. https://www.pmc.gov.au/resource-centre/indigenous-affairs/communicating-aboriginal-and-torres-strait-islander-audiences. 7. ↑ Browning, Daniel (14 September 2022). "'I called him Uncle': Remembering iconic theatre great Uncle Jack Charles". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-09-14/uncle-jack-charles-aboriginal-artist-indigenous-elder-leader/101437098. 8. ↑ Mills, Aunty Kathy. "You belong to my heart" (in en). https://www.spunstories.net/kathy-mills. 9. ↑ Jones, Anna. "'Aunt with no kids': The women redefining family roles" (in en). https://www.bbc.com/worklife/article/20211208-aunt-with-no-kids-the-women-redefining-family-roles. ## External links * v * t * e Family * History * Household * Nuclear family * Extended family * Conjugal family * Immediate family * Matrifocal family * Stepfamily * Dysfunctional family * Polyfidelitous families First-degree relatives| * Parent * father * mother * Child * son * daughter * Sibling * brother * sister Second-degree relatives| * Grandparent * Grandchild * Aunt * Uncle * Niece and nephew Third-degree relatives| * Great-grandparent * Great-grandchild * Grandnephew and grandniece * Great-Uncle * Great-Aunt * Cousin Family-in-law| * Spouse * wife * husband * Parents-in-law * Siblings-in-law * Son-in-law * Daughter-in-law Stepfamily| * Stepfather * Stepmother * Stepchild * Stepsibling Kinship terminology| * Kinship * Australian Aboriginal kinship * Adoption * Affinity * Consanguinity * Disownment * Divorce * Estrangement * Fictive kinship * Marriage * Nurture kinship * Hawaiian kinship * Sudanese kinship * Eskimo kinship * Iroquois kinship * Crow kinship * Omaha kinship Lineage| * Bilateral descent * Common ancestor * Family name * Family tree * Genealogy * Heirloom * Heredity * Inheritance * Lineal descendant * Matrilineality * Patrilineality * Pedigree chart * Progenitor Relationships| * Agape (parental love) * Eros (marital love) * Filial piety * Storge (familial love) Holidays| * Mother's Day * U.S. * Father's Day * Father-Daughter Day * Siblings Day * National Grandparents Day * Parents' Day * Children's Day * Family Day * Canada * American Family Day * National Family Week * UK Related| * Wedding anniversary * Sociology of the family * Museum of Motherhood * Incest 0.00 (0 votes) Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aunt. 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