"girlfriend"
Someone on reddit posted with the title "I hate my girlfriend", and when I clicked I saw a post beginning with:
Of course I originally thought this post was going to be about some problem with someone's relationship partner and had to back up for a moment and reinterpret what I was reading - clearly the poster's only romantic partner being referenced in this story is a man, and the only other woman in the story is not her relationship partner. Yet another of many, many times I've seen and heard this usage of "girlfriend", but this time, I took the time to write out my thoughts about it:
If you're interested, it spawned a very large discussion over on reddit, with some good subthreads.
- "So my friend and I were grabbing dinner last night after she had gotten into a tiff with her fiancée. I decided to grab my SO something since I was going to go see him right after. Went something like this."
Of course I originally thought this post was going to be about some problem with someone's relationship partner and had to back up for a moment and reinterpret what I was reading - clearly the poster's only romantic partner being referenced in this story is a man, and the only other woman in the story is not her relationship partner. Yet another of many, many times I've seen and heard this usage of "girlfriend", but this time, I took the time to write out my thoughts about it:
- Not actually an answer to your question, but a tangential comment since you hit one of my pet peeves: It annoys me greatly when people use "girlfriend" to mean "friend who is female and who I'm obviously not actually in a relationship with because I'm also female".
Partly, it's confusing. It takes extra context to figure out whether someone means it that way, or whether they're using the more usual meaning of "girlfriend" to mean "female dating/relationship partner". You supplied enough context in your post, but people often don't; your headline, though, didn't have enough context, and when I first clicked I thought I was going to read a post about someone's, you know, girlfriend!
But aside from the confusing aspect of it, it also seems to imply a world where women never date other women. It feels heterosexist to me, not in an intentional individual way, but just as a more general artifact of a culture that presumes lgbt people don't exist and so doesn't take account of them in its language. People who say it are generally just saying it out of habit and not thinking of that, but I wish they'd think of that, and help stamp out this term.
Edit: I should add that I'm aware that there's another nuance to this IMO outdated term: it came out of the idea that one's male and female friends play such significantly different roles in one's life that it's worth having another word besides "friend" to communicate which kind of friend you're referring to. Otherwise, why not always just say "friend" instead? Unfortunately, I think that this word usage also helps perpetuate the idea that male and female friends should play such significantly different roles in a woman's life, that the gender distinction becomes almost more significant than the individual differences between the people who happen to be her friends. It reinforces this part of our culture. Fortunately, I think that this part of our culture is on the wane - which is another aspect of gender-role assumptions being on the wane in general. So this is actually another reason why I'd like to see this usage go away, as part of encouraging feminism, gender role freedom, and the idea that friends' individuality matters a lot more than their gender.
If you're interested, it spawned a very large discussion over on reddit, with some good subthreads.

no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
(Maybe it's my age/generation, but "girlfriend" used in the same-sex-but-non-relationship way always confuses me: when I hear "girlfriend", I assume "together/ dating.")
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
Since then, I've heard (or at least noticed) it a lot more, and it seems odd. To me the weirdest part has been that, if a woman goes out with a close female friend, she's going out with a girlfriend. If it's a close male friend, it's a boyfriend. Why the differentiation? I've never gotten a clear answer to that... just a lot of blank stares when I ask. So thanks to the pointer to the discussion... it's interesting to see how other people respond.
no subject
The argument that these are closer friends than other friends I can sort of see, but that is what terms like "best friends" or "close friends" are for. Because what if your closest friends are a mix of sexes. Do I get to refer to my platonic not in a relationship with me boyfriends if we're close enough? So females who get along well with males are just out of luck? And this plays all sorts of havoc with the genderqueer, of course. Which is, of course, what happens when you have sex written into things. You start having those messy lines of who gets to use it and who do you get to apply it to?
But I do think if males can survive without a special word for extra close friends, then females can too. Especially since we don't get one that actually works.
no subject
I think this is one of those things I wouldn't correct other people on, though, because it seems... hmm, maybe generational? Like, something my mother says, that my aunt would say, but I wouldn't?
Interestingly, one of my girl friends is a lesbian who, to differentiate from girls who are friends, would talk about her "ladyfriend." Which I actually like better than "girlfriend" for romantic partner, somehow. :)
no subject
no subject
no subject
If someone could make a really strong case for why we *should* change them, and it seemed plausible that that case would appeal broadly enough that there were a chance such a change might happen, then I'd evaluate the case and decide how much I agree with it. But "let's reclaim 'girlfriend' for this secondary meaning" - a meaning I think is inherently troublesome even if it weren't bumping up against a more established word in a confusing way - is not that case :)
But I see that as a tangent to what I'm talking about here, not an opposition to it. Even if there were such a strong case, it'd still be certain that the primary meaning of "girlfriend" would last for a long time, and it'd still be a good thing to help its secondary meaning go away. Particularly if the reason people don't like girlfriend and boyfriend is that they want to move away from gendered words for romantic partners; why do we need gendered words for friends?
no subject
Personally, I have no objection to gendered words for either friends or romantic partners. Sometimes I want to use a gendered word (because sometimes gender is relevant) and sometimes I don't. I have the choice of which to use and that's all good with me. What I object to is tacking on an implied assumption that is totally distinct from the meaning of the word and then enforcing that assumption on people who use the word. Because there's really nothing about the words girlfriend/boyfriend that have anything to do with whether or not I'm dating/having sex with someone.
no subject
(Long before we were born, meaning #2 was the primary meaning, but only very old people were alive when that was true. And in that time, gender distinctions were quite important enough to merit a separate word for friends by gender.)
no subject
Historically, I think this usage came about in a world with such strict gender roles that the roles played by a female friend and by a male friend were so different that they needed different words. While I suspect you don't mean it that way, I always hear it as "my friend, whose relationship with me you cannot understand without knowing the essential fact of their gender".
no subject
no subject
no subject
I'm much happier when people don't do this, and for all the reasons you called out.
no subject
"Sorry to assume you were a woman.... I hope that gives you some understanding of why I responded how I responded to your comments. I assumed that you were a self righteous feminist."
It is rather bizarre to me that your comment was more acceptable from a man than a woman.
no subject
On the other hand, one of the things I love about the TwoXChromosomes subreddit is that it's one of the only general-topic discussion places I've run into on the Internet where people assume you're female by default.
no subject
no subject
This is exactly the sort of comment some people on that reddit discussion could benefit from seeing. There have been a few comments like this, but the more people they see it from, the more it might get through.
For example, in reply to this.
no subject
no subject