I want stories of cheating wife’s and y u cheating or cheated just for better understanding
But what if they cheated first? Before the husband found out?Wives who cuck their husbands don’t usually cheat
They do if the hubby is an oblivious cuckold. A husband of a cheating wife is the most common form of cuckold - even if he doesn't know it!Wives who cuck their husbands don’t usually cheat
I don't agree, cucking for by and for couples, cheating is just cheating.They do if the hubby is an oblivious cuckold. A husband of a cheating wife is the most common form of cuckold - even if he doesn't know it!
By definition, a cuckold is a man with an unfaithful wife. So, she is 'cucking' him every time she is unfaithful. However, in the online cuckold community, it is mainly assumed that it is consensual cucking.I don't agree, cucking for by and for couples, cheating is just cheating.
This is absolutely factual.By definition, a cuckold is a man with an unfaithful wife. So, she is 'cucking' him every time she is unfaithful. However, in the online cuckold community, it is mainly assumed that it is consensual cucking.
And technically, the most correct. The husband of a cheating wife is the original cuckold. In my view, sharing is not cuckolding.They do if the hubby is an oblivious cuckold. A husband of a cheating wife is the most common form of cuckold - even if he doesn't know it!
Note that it is your view. The definition of cuckold is a man whose wife is unfaithful. Sharing is still unfaithful.And technically, the most correct. The husband of a cheating wife is the original cuckold. In my view, sharing is not cuckolding.
I agree that is my view, and that it's a minority view these days. Do not agree that your definition is technicall correct, but that it reflects common usage, which has evolved out of ignorance of the original meaning. But that's how language evolves, not by the educated, but by the illiterate. 'Lucked out' is a classic where it's meaning has been reversed through the ignorance of users. It's proper usage meant out of luck, not 'got lucky'. The same is happening with 'woke'.Note that it is your view. The definition of cuckold is a man whose wife is unfaithful. Sharing is still unfaithful.
It's not MY definition.I agree that is my view, and that it's a minority view these days. Do not agree that your definition is technicall correct, but that it reflects common usage, which has evolved out of ignorance of the original meaning. But that's how language evolves, not by the educated, but by the illiterate. 'Lucked out' is a classic where it's meaning has been reversed through the ignorance of users. It's proper usage meant out of luck, not 'got lucky'. The same is happening with 'woke'.
My way? Your way? You may not be interested in dictionary definitions (except when they support your view) but that is what dictates what language is, so that we are all communicate the same playing field.Have it your way. I'll stick with what works for me. I can't see how a stag can be a cuckold. I'm not interested in dictionary definitions except they support my view that language/meaning changes over time and it is the illiterate that drive the change. What was the dictionary meaning of cuckold 50 years ago, a century ago? What will it be in the future?