Can the word 'princeling' used for a princess?

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99bottles

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I have been writing a story with a princess and a prince and, in the text, I often refer to them collectively as 'princelings'. But, today, someone went like, 'Wait, is one of them a transgender?' and pointed out that the 'princeling' word can be used only for males. So, was my choice inaccurate? Should I replace the 'princelings' word with something else?
 
'Prince' is for males, 'princess' for females. The 'ling' is simply a diminutive, so a 'princeling' is a little prince (male). It can also convey a negative connotation, depending on context.

I don't believe there is a diminutive form for 'princess', or at least not one I've heard. So yes, it was incorrect to refer to them both as 'princelings' if one is female.
 
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I have never heard it used that way. Possibly, in more sexist times, there was little need to distinguish princesses by age.
 
The 'ess' (or 'ss', since the root word prince already ends in 'e') in 'princess' is already a suffix denoting femaleness. The root word 'prince' by definition establishes gender, while the suffix 'ling' makes it a diminutive (establishes size). Off the top of my head, I can't think of a suffix that establishes both size and gender. Maybe someone else can come up with an example.

In theory, you could combine suffixes and get 'princessling' for a small female prince, but it's not an actual word we use. We seem to either focus on the size or gender, but not both simultaneously.

'Princeling' isn't a terribly common word to begin with.
 
I can't think of a suffix that establishes both size and gender. Maybe someone else can come up with an example.

The suffix -ette can denote both diminutive size (kitchenette) and female gender (suffragette).
 
So, was a small woman campaigning for voting rights a suffragettette?
 
So, was a small woman campaigning for voting rights a suffragettette?

No, I'd say the -ette in suffragette denotes only femaleness, not smallness.

However, I think there is a decent argument to be made that the double use of -ette for both femaleness and smallness is no coincidence—both have in some very basic way a sense of inferiority. This argument might be made by those who object to the use of -ette as sexist.
 
So, was a small woman campaigning for voting rights a suffragettette?

Oh, sorry, I misread your post! I didn't see the double suffix. :oops:
 
The suffix -ette can denote both diminutive size (kitchenette) and female gender (suffragette).

I actually meant one that carries both meanings simultaneously. With 'ette', it's either small, female, or imitation (i.e. leatherette), but not any combination simultaneously that I can think of.

Again, we seem to have to choose, although I can't say why we should have to.
 
So, was a small woman campaigning for voting rights a suffragettette?

Either that, or an imitation of one.
 
How about suffragetteling?
 
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