What's the opposite of “cradle-snatcher”?
If a cradle-snatcher is someone middle-aged or older who has a romantic or sexual relationship with a much younger partner. What do we call the much younger person in that relationship?
What do we call a person who is physically and romantically attracted to much older people?
single-word-requests
add a comment |
If a cradle-snatcher is someone middle-aged or older who has a romantic or sexual relationship with a much younger partner. What do we call the much younger person in that relationship?
What do we call a person who is physically and romantically attracted to much older people?
single-word-requests
1
Related
– tchrist♦
Aug 22 '15 at 13:44
add a comment |
If a cradle-snatcher is someone middle-aged or older who has a romantic or sexual relationship with a much younger partner. What do we call the much younger person in that relationship?
What do we call a person who is physically and romantically attracted to much older people?
single-word-requests
If a cradle-snatcher is someone middle-aged or older who has a romantic or sexual relationship with a much younger partner. What do we call the much younger person in that relationship?
What do we call a person who is physically and romantically attracted to much older people?
single-word-requests
single-word-requests
edited Aug 24 '15 at 21:02
Mari-Lou A
61.9k55219456
61.9k55219456
asked Aug 20 '15 at 2:28
Mathieu LakmalMathieu Lakmal
21124
21124
1
Related
– tchrist♦
Aug 22 '15 at 13:44
add a comment |
1
Related
– tchrist♦
Aug 22 '15 at 13:44
1
1
Related
– tchrist♦
Aug 22 '15 at 13:44
Related
– tchrist♦
Aug 22 '15 at 13:44
add a comment |
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
I think you need to rephrase your question. Otherwise, my answer would be gerontophilia which is probably not what you were looking for.
- sex attraction toward old persons. (M-W)
Gerontophile:
- someone who is sexually attracted to old people. (Collins)
add a comment |
I've heard the term "grave robber" being used that way, although I always found it distasteful.
Urban Dictionary:
The opposite of a cougar, a woman over the age of 18 who dates older men. Differentiated from a gold digger because the men the Grave Robber dates are not necessarily rich. Also not considered jail bait, as said woman is over age, however if she was under age she would be considered jail bait.
"Ick is totally hitting on Jason right now..." "I know she's such a grave robber"
http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=GraveRobber
OK, I've looked at the first definition. Not cool, but there are 7 others.
– Mari-Lou A
Aug 23 '15 at 5:51
@Mari-LouA Well, hey, it's slang, just like cradle-snatcher. Besides, I've heard it used. And come on, the first definition includes "Someone who steals and robs graves." Hard to beat that level of legitimacy, you know?
– Misha R
Aug 23 '15 at 6:04
1
So someone who robs graves is sexually attracted to older people? I think not. Yes, I get it is slang. Yes, I've heard it but used with this meaning: to steal from graves. Good answers require a little work, but the bounty expires in a week and you're likely to earn more upvotes if you "show" the term is also used in the "May December romance" context. EDIT: See? You got an upvote from the community
– Mari-Lou A
Aug 23 '15 at 6:12
@Mari-LouA Heh, I didn't even notice the bounty until you pointed it out :) Just saw the question and thought "hey, that sounds like that term I hate." Honestly, I much prefer "toy boy." Super cute. "Grave robber" seems unnecessarily mean to the older party. Note: entirely unbiased over here. Haven't robbed any graves. Yet.
– Misha R
Aug 23 '15 at 6:30
@Mari-LouA Oh nice, thanks! My first bounty!
– Misha R
Aug 26 '15 at 0:31
add a comment |
A toy boy:
- A male lover who is much younger than his partner. (ODO)
UD defines also toy girl, but it seem to be a less common expression:
- Like A Boy Toy Except A Girl Instead. Will do anything for the male even though she knows she is just being used for his pleasure. No intimate connection.
2
Weird... I always thought the phrase was "boy toy."
– sumelic
Aug 23 '15 at 6:11
1
@sumelic Sinitta would disagree.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
Sep 18 '18 at 8:44
add a comment |
A gold digger is "a woman who seeks gifts and expensive pleasures from men" (The American Heritage Dictionary, 1973).
The OP is asking for a genderless term. See: "His/her age"
– Mari-Lou A
Aug 20 '15 at 4:43
5
But gold diggers aren't attracted to age, just to money.
– sumelic
Aug 20 '15 at 5:16
2
I would consider "gold digger' to be genderless, And while it doesn't demand that the "target" be older, it's certainly common that that's the case. (To assure the right connotation is read, one could always use "(g)old digger".)
– Hot Licks
Aug 20 '15 at 12:43
1
@HotLicks "Old digger" just sounds like an old man who digs for a living. Or an old man who is currently digging, I suppose. Or someone who's been seen around a lot and for whatever reason is called "Digger." "Say, you know that guy?" "Yeah, that's just ol' Digger. Don't worry about him." "He single?" "Yeah." "He rich?" "Yeah, but he's like three times your age." "Ew, never mind."
– Misha R
Aug 23 '15 at 6:54
add a comment |
The proper term is “Gerbil”
A younger woman attacted to older men.
New contributor
add a comment |
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5 Answers
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5 Answers
5
active
oldest
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I think you need to rephrase your question. Otherwise, my answer would be gerontophilia which is probably not what you were looking for.
- sex attraction toward old persons. (M-W)
Gerontophile:
- someone who is sexually attracted to old people. (Collins)
add a comment |
I think you need to rephrase your question. Otherwise, my answer would be gerontophilia which is probably not what you were looking for.
- sex attraction toward old persons. (M-W)
Gerontophile:
- someone who is sexually attracted to old people. (Collins)
add a comment |
I think you need to rephrase your question. Otherwise, my answer would be gerontophilia which is probably not what you were looking for.
- sex attraction toward old persons. (M-W)
Gerontophile:
- someone who is sexually attracted to old people. (Collins)
I think you need to rephrase your question. Otherwise, my answer would be gerontophilia which is probably not what you were looking for.
- sex attraction toward old persons. (M-W)
Gerontophile:
- someone who is sexually attracted to old people. (Collins)
edited Aug 23 '15 at 7:05
user66974
answered Aug 22 '15 at 2:28
illynoiillynoi
94115
94115
add a comment |
add a comment |
I've heard the term "grave robber" being used that way, although I always found it distasteful.
Urban Dictionary:
The opposite of a cougar, a woman over the age of 18 who dates older men. Differentiated from a gold digger because the men the Grave Robber dates are not necessarily rich. Also not considered jail bait, as said woman is over age, however if she was under age she would be considered jail bait.
"Ick is totally hitting on Jason right now..." "I know she's such a grave robber"
http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=GraveRobber
OK, I've looked at the first definition. Not cool, but there are 7 others.
– Mari-Lou A
Aug 23 '15 at 5:51
@Mari-LouA Well, hey, it's slang, just like cradle-snatcher. Besides, I've heard it used. And come on, the first definition includes "Someone who steals and robs graves." Hard to beat that level of legitimacy, you know?
– Misha R
Aug 23 '15 at 6:04
1
So someone who robs graves is sexually attracted to older people? I think not. Yes, I get it is slang. Yes, I've heard it but used with this meaning: to steal from graves. Good answers require a little work, but the bounty expires in a week and you're likely to earn more upvotes if you "show" the term is also used in the "May December romance" context. EDIT: See? You got an upvote from the community
– Mari-Lou A
Aug 23 '15 at 6:12
@Mari-LouA Heh, I didn't even notice the bounty until you pointed it out :) Just saw the question and thought "hey, that sounds like that term I hate." Honestly, I much prefer "toy boy." Super cute. "Grave robber" seems unnecessarily mean to the older party. Note: entirely unbiased over here. Haven't robbed any graves. Yet.
– Misha R
Aug 23 '15 at 6:30
@Mari-LouA Oh nice, thanks! My first bounty!
– Misha R
Aug 26 '15 at 0:31
add a comment |
I've heard the term "grave robber" being used that way, although I always found it distasteful.
Urban Dictionary:
The opposite of a cougar, a woman over the age of 18 who dates older men. Differentiated from a gold digger because the men the Grave Robber dates are not necessarily rich. Also not considered jail bait, as said woman is over age, however if she was under age she would be considered jail bait.
"Ick is totally hitting on Jason right now..." "I know she's such a grave robber"
http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=GraveRobber
OK, I've looked at the first definition. Not cool, but there are 7 others.
– Mari-Lou A
Aug 23 '15 at 5:51
@Mari-LouA Well, hey, it's slang, just like cradle-snatcher. Besides, I've heard it used. And come on, the first definition includes "Someone who steals and robs graves." Hard to beat that level of legitimacy, you know?
– Misha R
Aug 23 '15 at 6:04
1
So someone who robs graves is sexually attracted to older people? I think not. Yes, I get it is slang. Yes, I've heard it but used with this meaning: to steal from graves. Good answers require a little work, but the bounty expires in a week and you're likely to earn more upvotes if you "show" the term is also used in the "May December romance" context. EDIT: See? You got an upvote from the community
– Mari-Lou A
Aug 23 '15 at 6:12
@Mari-LouA Heh, I didn't even notice the bounty until you pointed it out :) Just saw the question and thought "hey, that sounds like that term I hate." Honestly, I much prefer "toy boy." Super cute. "Grave robber" seems unnecessarily mean to the older party. Note: entirely unbiased over here. Haven't robbed any graves. Yet.
– Misha R
Aug 23 '15 at 6:30
@Mari-LouA Oh nice, thanks! My first bounty!
– Misha R
Aug 26 '15 at 0:31
add a comment |
I've heard the term "grave robber" being used that way, although I always found it distasteful.
Urban Dictionary:
The opposite of a cougar, a woman over the age of 18 who dates older men. Differentiated from a gold digger because the men the Grave Robber dates are not necessarily rich. Also not considered jail bait, as said woman is over age, however if she was under age she would be considered jail bait.
"Ick is totally hitting on Jason right now..." "I know she's such a grave robber"
http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=GraveRobber
I've heard the term "grave robber" being used that way, although I always found it distasteful.
Urban Dictionary:
The opposite of a cougar, a woman over the age of 18 who dates older men. Differentiated from a gold digger because the men the Grave Robber dates are not necessarily rich. Also not considered jail bait, as said woman is over age, however if she was under age she would be considered jail bait.
"Ick is totally hitting on Jason right now..." "I know she's such a grave robber"
http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=GraveRobber
edited Aug 23 '15 at 5:58
answered Aug 20 '15 at 7:01
Misha RMisha R
58347
58347
OK, I've looked at the first definition. Not cool, but there are 7 others.
– Mari-Lou A
Aug 23 '15 at 5:51
@Mari-LouA Well, hey, it's slang, just like cradle-snatcher. Besides, I've heard it used. And come on, the first definition includes "Someone who steals and robs graves." Hard to beat that level of legitimacy, you know?
– Misha R
Aug 23 '15 at 6:04
1
So someone who robs graves is sexually attracted to older people? I think not. Yes, I get it is slang. Yes, I've heard it but used with this meaning: to steal from graves. Good answers require a little work, but the bounty expires in a week and you're likely to earn more upvotes if you "show" the term is also used in the "May December romance" context. EDIT: See? You got an upvote from the community
– Mari-Lou A
Aug 23 '15 at 6:12
@Mari-LouA Heh, I didn't even notice the bounty until you pointed it out :) Just saw the question and thought "hey, that sounds like that term I hate." Honestly, I much prefer "toy boy." Super cute. "Grave robber" seems unnecessarily mean to the older party. Note: entirely unbiased over here. Haven't robbed any graves. Yet.
– Misha R
Aug 23 '15 at 6:30
@Mari-LouA Oh nice, thanks! My first bounty!
– Misha R
Aug 26 '15 at 0:31
add a comment |
OK, I've looked at the first definition. Not cool, but there are 7 others.
– Mari-Lou A
Aug 23 '15 at 5:51
@Mari-LouA Well, hey, it's slang, just like cradle-snatcher. Besides, I've heard it used. And come on, the first definition includes "Someone who steals and robs graves." Hard to beat that level of legitimacy, you know?
– Misha R
Aug 23 '15 at 6:04
1
So someone who robs graves is sexually attracted to older people? I think not. Yes, I get it is slang. Yes, I've heard it but used with this meaning: to steal from graves. Good answers require a little work, but the bounty expires in a week and you're likely to earn more upvotes if you "show" the term is also used in the "May December romance" context. EDIT: See? You got an upvote from the community
– Mari-Lou A
Aug 23 '15 at 6:12
@Mari-LouA Heh, I didn't even notice the bounty until you pointed it out :) Just saw the question and thought "hey, that sounds like that term I hate." Honestly, I much prefer "toy boy." Super cute. "Grave robber" seems unnecessarily mean to the older party. Note: entirely unbiased over here. Haven't robbed any graves. Yet.
– Misha R
Aug 23 '15 at 6:30
@Mari-LouA Oh nice, thanks! My first bounty!
– Misha R
Aug 26 '15 at 0:31
OK, I've looked at the first definition. Not cool, but there are 7 others.
– Mari-Lou A
Aug 23 '15 at 5:51
OK, I've looked at the first definition. Not cool, but there are 7 others.
– Mari-Lou A
Aug 23 '15 at 5:51
@Mari-LouA Well, hey, it's slang, just like cradle-snatcher. Besides, I've heard it used. And come on, the first definition includes "Someone who steals and robs graves." Hard to beat that level of legitimacy, you know?
– Misha R
Aug 23 '15 at 6:04
@Mari-LouA Well, hey, it's slang, just like cradle-snatcher. Besides, I've heard it used. And come on, the first definition includes "Someone who steals and robs graves." Hard to beat that level of legitimacy, you know?
– Misha R
Aug 23 '15 at 6:04
1
1
So someone who robs graves is sexually attracted to older people? I think not. Yes, I get it is slang. Yes, I've heard it but used with this meaning: to steal from graves. Good answers require a little work, but the bounty expires in a week and you're likely to earn more upvotes if you "show" the term is also used in the "May December romance" context. EDIT: See? You got an upvote from the community
– Mari-Lou A
Aug 23 '15 at 6:12
So someone who robs graves is sexually attracted to older people? I think not. Yes, I get it is slang. Yes, I've heard it but used with this meaning: to steal from graves. Good answers require a little work, but the bounty expires in a week and you're likely to earn more upvotes if you "show" the term is also used in the "May December romance" context. EDIT: See? You got an upvote from the community
– Mari-Lou A
Aug 23 '15 at 6:12
@Mari-LouA Heh, I didn't even notice the bounty until you pointed it out :) Just saw the question and thought "hey, that sounds like that term I hate." Honestly, I much prefer "toy boy." Super cute. "Grave robber" seems unnecessarily mean to the older party. Note: entirely unbiased over here. Haven't robbed any graves. Yet.
– Misha R
Aug 23 '15 at 6:30
@Mari-LouA Heh, I didn't even notice the bounty until you pointed it out :) Just saw the question and thought "hey, that sounds like that term I hate." Honestly, I much prefer "toy boy." Super cute. "Grave robber" seems unnecessarily mean to the older party. Note: entirely unbiased over here. Haven't robbed any graves. Yet.
– Misha R
Aug 23 '15 at 6:30
@Mari-LouA Oh nice, thanks! My first bounty!
– Misha R
Aug 26 '15 at 0:31
@Mari-LouA Oh nice, thanks! My first bounty!
– Misha R
Aug 26 '15 at 0:31
add a comment |
A toy boy:
- A male lover who is much younger than his partner. (ODO)
UD defines also toy girl, but it seem to be a less common expression:
- Like A Boy Toy Except A Girl Instead. Will do anything for the male even though she knows she is just being used for his pleasure. No intimate connection.
2
Weird... I always thought the phrase was "boy toy."
– sumelic
Aug 23 '15 at 6:11
1
@sumelic Sinitta would disagree.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
Sep 18 '18 at 8:44
add a comment |
A toy boy:
- A male lover who is much younger than his partner. (ODO)
UD defines also toy girl, but it seem to be a less common expression:
- Like A Boy Toy Except A Girl Instead. Will do anything for the male even though she knows she is just being used for his pleasure. No intimate connection.
2
Weird... I always thought the phrase was "boy toy."
– sumelic
Aug 23 '15 at 6:11
1
@sumelic Sinitta would disagree.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
Sep 18 '18 at 8:44
add a comment |
A toy boy:
- A male lover who is much younger than his partner. (ODO)
UD defines also toy girl, but it seem to be a less common expression:
- Like A Boy Toy Except A Girl Instead. Will do anything for the male even though she knows she is just being used for his pleasure. No intimate connection.
A toy boy:
- A male lover who is much younger than his partner. (ODO)
UD defines also toy girl, but it seem to be a less common expression:
- Like A Boy Toy Except A Girl Instead. Will do anything for the male even though she knows she is just being used for his pleasure. No intimate connection.
edited Aug 23 '15 at 5:57
answered Aug 23 '15 at 5:51
user66974
2
Weird... I always thought the phrase was "boy toy."
– sumelic
Aug 23 '15 at 6:11
1
@sumelic Sinitta would disagree.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
Sep 18 '18 at 8:44
add a comment |
2
Weird... I always thought the phrase was "boy toy."
– sumelic
Aug 23 '15 at 6:11
1
@sumelic Sinitta would disagree.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
Sep 18 '18 at 8:44
2
2
Weird... I always thought the phrase was "boy toy."
– sumelic
Aug 23 '15 at 6:11
Weird... I always thought the phrase was "boy toy."
– sumelic
Aug 23 '15 at 6:11
1
1
@sumelic Sinitta would disagree.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
Sep 18 '18 at 8:44
@sumelic Sinitta would disagree.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
Sep 18 '18 at 8:44
add a comment |
A gold digger is "a woman who seeks gifts and expensive pleasures from men" (The American Heritage Dictionary, 1973).
The OP is asking for a genderless term. See: "His/her age"
– Mari-Lou A
Aug 20 '15 at 4:43
5
But gold diggers aren't attracted to age, just to money.
– sumelic
Aug 20 '15 at 5:16
2
I would consider "gold digger' to be genderless, And while it doesn't demand that the "target" be older, it's certainly common that that's the case. (To assure the right connotation is read, one could always use "(g)old digger".)
– Hot Licks
Aug 20 '15 at 12:43
1
@HotLicks "Old digger" just sounds like an old man who digs for a living. Or an old man who is currently digging, I suppose. Or someone who's been seen around a lot and for whatever reason is called "Digger." "Say, you know that guy?" "Yeah, that's just ol' Digger. Don't worry about him." "He single?" "Yeah." "He rich?" "Yeah, but he's like three times your age." "Ew, never mind."
– Misha R
Aug 23 '15 at 6:54
add a comment |
A gold digger is "a woman who seeks gifts and expensive pleasures from men" (The American Heritage Dictionary, 1973).
The OP is asking for a genderless term. See: "His/her age"
– Mari-Lou A
Aug 20 '15 at 4:43
5
But gold diggers aren't attracted to age, just to money.
– sumelic
Aug 20 '15 at 5:16
2
I would consider "gold digger' to be genderless, And while it doesn't demand that the "target" be older, it's certainly common that that's the case. (To assure the right connotation is read, one could always use "(g)old digger".)
– Hot Licks
Aug 20 '15 at 12:43
1
@HotLicks "Old digger" just sounds like an old man who digs for a living. Or an old man who is currently digging, I suppose. Or someone who's been seen around a lot and for whatever reason is called "Digger." "Say, you know that guy?" "Yeah, that's just ol' Digger. Don't worry about him." "He single?" "Yeah." "He rich?" "Yeah, but he's like three times your age." "Ew, never mind."
– Misha R
Aug 23 '15 at 6:54
add a comment |
A gold digger is "a woman who seeks gifts and expensive pleasures from men" (The American Heritage Dictionary, 1973).
A gold digger is "a woman who seeks gifts and expensive pleasures from men" (The American Heritage Dictionary, 1973).
edited Aug 23 '15 at 2:22
answered Aug 20 '15 at 4:29
user133653user133653
674
674
The OP is asking for a genderless term. See: "His/her age"
– Mari-Lou A
Aug 20 '15 at 4:43
5
But gold diggers aren't attracted to age, just to money.
– sumelic
Aug 20 '15 at 5:16
2
I would consider "gold digger' to be genderless, And while it doesn't demand that the "target" be older, it's certainly common that that's the case. (To assure the right connotation is read, one could always use "(g)old digger".)
– Hot Licks
Aug 20 '15 at 12:43
1
@HotLicks "Old digger" just sounds like an old man who digs for a living. Or an old man who is currently digging, I suppose. Or someone who's been seen around a lot and for whatever reason is called "Digger." "Say, you know that guy?" "Yeah, that's just ol' Digger. Don't worry about him." "He single?" "Yeah." "He rich?" "Yeah, but he's like three times your age." "Ew, never mind."
– Misha R
Aug 23 '15 at 6:54
add a comment |
The OP is asking for a genderless term. See: "His/her age"
– Mari-Lou A
Aug 20 '15 at 4:43
5
But gold diggers aren't attracted to age, just to money.
– sumelic
Aug 20 '15 at 5:16
2
I would consider "gold digger' to be genderless, And while it doesn't demand that the "target" be older, it's certainly common that that's the case. (To assure the right connotation is read, one could always use "(g)old digger".)
– Hot Licks
Aug 20 '15 at 12:43
1
@HotLicks "Old digger" just sounds like an old man who digs for a living. Or an old man who is currently digging, I suppose. Or someone who's been seen around a lot and for whatever reason is called "Digger." "Say, you know that guy?" "Yeah, that's just ol' Digger. Don't worry about him." "He single?" "Yeah." "He rich?" "Yeah, but he's like three times your age." "Ew, never mind."
– Misha R
Aug 23 '15 at 6:54
The OP is asking for a genderless term. See: "His/her age"
– Mari-Lou A
Aug 20 '15 at 4:43
The OP is asking for a genderless term. See: "His/her age"
– Mari-Lou A
Aug 20 '15 at 4:43
5
5
But gold diggers aren't attracted to age, just to money.
– sumelic
Aug 20 '15 at 5:16
But gold diggers aren't attracted to age, just to money.
– sumelic
Aug 20 '15 at 5:16
2
2
I would consider "gold digger' to be genderless, And while it doesn't demand that the "target" be older, it's certainly common that that's the case. (To assure the right connotation is read, one could always use "(g)old digger".)
– Hot Licks
Aug 20 '15 at 12:43
I would consider "gold digger' to be genderless, And while it doesn't demand that the "target" be older, it's certainly common that that's the case. (To assure the right connotation is read, one could always use "(g)old digger".)
– Hot Licks
Aug 20 '15 at 12:43
1
1
@HotLicks "Old digger" just sounds like an old man who digs for a living. Or an old man who is currently digging, I suppose. Or someone who's been seen around a lot and for whatever reason is called "Digger." "Say, you know that guy?" "Yeah, that's just ol' Digger. Don't worry about him." "He single?" "Yeah." "He rich?" "Yeah, but he's like three times your age." "Ew, never mind."
– Misha R
Aug 23 '15 at 6:54
@HotLicks "Old digger" just sounds like an old man who digs for a living. Or an old man who is currently digging, I suppose. Or someone who's been seen around a lot and for whatever reason is called "Digger." "Say, you know that guy?" "Yeah, that's just ol' Digger. Don't worry about him." "He single?" "Yeah." "He rich?" "Yeah, but he's like three times your age." "Ew, never mind."
– Misha R
Aug 23 '15 at 6:54
add a comment |
The proper term is “Gerbil”
A younger woman attacted to older men.
New contributor
add a comment |
The proper term is “Gerbil”
A younger woman attacted to older men.
New contributor
add a comment |
The proper term is “Gerbil”
A younger woman attacted to older men.
New contributor
The proper term is “Gerbil”
A younger woman attacted to older men.
New contributor
New contributor
answered 12 mins ago
BrahGBrahG
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– tchrist♦
Aug 22 '15 at 13:44