hen-peck
English
    
    Verb
    
hen-peck (third-person singular simple present hen-pecks, present participle hen-pecking, simple past and past participle hen-pecked)
- Alternative form of henpeck
-  1819 July 15, [Lord Byron], Don Juan, London: […] Thomas Davison, […], →OCLC, canto I, (please specify the stanza number):- But—Oh! ye lords of ladies intellectual, Inform us truly, have they not hen-peck'd you all?
 
-  1876, Emma Jane Worboise, “The Countess at Home”, in Lady Clarissa, London: James Clarke & Co., […]; Hodder and Stoughton, […], →OCLC, page 192:- I don't want to hen-peck you ! Hen-pecking is shocking bad taste. But I won't be a slighted, neglected wife; I have a spirit of my own, and I won't meekly submit to be ignored.
 
-  1995, Betty Malz, Women in Tune, page 88:- We have friends who thought it was cute when their daughter "hen-pecked" her husband. But, when their son married a spicy little gal who tried to hen-peck their son, they were very angry.
 
-  2014, Jaqueline Girdner, A Sensitive Kind of Murder:- Laura didn't have to hen-peck the man; he was a self-made wimp.
 
 
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