Female promiscuity  

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== See also == == See also ==
- 
*[[Casta est, quam nemo rogavit]] *[[Casta est, quam nemo rogavit]]
-*''[[The Unfaithful Wife]] by Claude Chabrol.+*[[Female promiscuity]]
-*''[[The Adulterous Woman]]'' by Albert Camus. +*[[Female sexuality]]
-*[[female sexuality]]+*[[Infidelity]]
-*[[infidelity]]+*[[Cuckold]]{{Template}}
-*[[cuckold]]{{Template}}+
*[[Fallen woman]] *[[Fallen woman]]
*[[Scarlet woman]] *[[Scarlet woman]]
*[[Jesus and the woman taken in adultery]] *[[Jesus and the woman taken in adultery]]
*[[Insatiability of women]] *[[Insatiability of women]]
 +==In fiction==
 +*''[[The Unfaithful Wife]] by Claude Chabrol.
 +*''[[The Adulterous Woman]]'' by Albert Camus.
{{GFDL}} {{GFDL}}

Revision as of 14:35, 30 March 2013

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Female infidelity is the unfaithfulness of the female partner in a sexual relationship. It has been the object of literature since The Loves of the Gods, 1001 Nights, where it is the center of the frame tale and the antifeminist literature of the Middle Ages. A cheated husband is commonly called a cuckold because he is at risk of raising another male's offspring.

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Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Female promiscuity" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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