prude (pr
d)
n.
One who is excessively concerned with being or appearing to be proper, modest, or righteous.
[French, short for prude femme, virtuous woman : Old French prude, feminine of prud, virtuous; see proud + French femme, woman (from Latin femina; see feminine).]
Word History: Being called a prude is rarely considered a compliment, but if we dig into the history of the word
prude, we find that it has a noble past. The change for the worse took place in French. French
prude first had a good sense, “wise woman,” but apparently a woman could be too wise or, in the eyes of some, too observant of decorum and propriety. Thus
prude took on the sense in French that was brought into English along with the word, first recorded in 1704. The French word
prude was a shortened form of
prude femme (earlier in Old French
prode femme), a word modeled on earlier
preudomme, “a man of experience and integrity.” The second part of this word is, of course,
homme, “man.” Old French
prod, meaning “wise, prudent,” is from Vulgar Latin
pr
dis with the same sense.
Pr
dis in turn comes from Late Latin
pr
de, “advantageous,” derived from the verb
pr
desse, “to be good.” Despite this history filled with usefulness, profit, wisdom, and integrity,
prude has become a term of reproach.