Poll of the Day > So the word husband literally means "master of the household".

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Dreaming_King
05/25/17 4:25:18 PM
#1:


Really makes you think, huh?
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Nil-
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FrozenBananas
05/25/17 4:28:26 PM
#2:


Not really :/
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Look at you....you're a bloody puppet!!
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Zeus
05/25/17 4:31:16 PM
#3:


tbh, back when I was in college, a professor asked the class if anybody knew what husbandry meant and a guy responded, "Keeping your wife from spending all of your money."
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rjsilverthorn
05/25/17 4:33:44 PM
#4:


If by literally you mean, "At one point in its etymology it meant"
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Dreaming_King
05/25/17 4:34:49 PM
#5:


rjsilverthorn posted...
If by literally you mean, "At one point in its etymology it meant"

Yeah, I tried to fit that in the title but ran out of space.
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Nil-
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AElaias
05/25/17 4:49:25 PM
#6:


The correlation between kingdom hierarchy and domestic relationships has always been there, except after the 19th century when our forefathers thought it was too pompous for civility. As a scholar, I find that cultures in the Bible, Japan, and still in Turkey refer to the man as Lord, or Master in their structure. It's just tradition from the ancient world that was transmitted unto everyone worldwide if you research etymology.
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The best preacher is the heart; the best teacher is time; the best book is the world; the best friend is God. - Talmud
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TES_Nut
05/25/17 5:20:04 PM
#7:


AElaias posted...
The correlation between kingdom hierarchy and domestic relationships has always been there, except after the 19th century when our forefathers thought it was too pompous for civility. As a scholar, I find that cultures in the Bible, Japan, and still in Turkey refer to the man as Lord, or Master in their structure. It's just tradition from the ancient world that was transmitted unto everyone worldwide if you research etymology.


"As a scholar" wtf does that mean?
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DarkKirby2500
05/25/17 5:24:15 PM
#8:


The closest definition of "husband" to your "interpretation" of it is "manager of another's property".
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The only fool bigger than the person who knows it all is the person who argues with him. They're all complacent sheeple. Passion fights, but reason wins.
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Zeus
05/26/17 12:28:45 AM
#9:


TES_Nut posted...
AElaias posted...
The correlation between kingdom hierarchy and domestic relationships has always been there, except after the 19th century when our forefathers thought it was too pompous for civility. As a scholar, I find that cultures in the Bible, Japan, and still in Turkey refer to the man as Lord, or Master in their structure. It's just tradition from the ancient world that was transmitted unto everyone worldwide if you research etymology.


"As a scholar" wtf does that mean?


That he thinks of himself as a scholar? Frankly, as a gentleman, I find such a self-descriptor pompous.
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