Dictionary Definition
waif n : a homeless child especially one forsaken
or orphaned; "street children beg or steal in order to survive"
[syn: street
child]
User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
- Goods found of which the owner is not known; originally, such goods as a pursued thief threw away to prevent being apprehended, which belonged to the king unless the owner made pursuit of the felon, took him, and brought him to justice.
- Hence, anything found, or without an owner; that which comes along, as it were, by chance.
- A wanderer; a castaway; a stray; a homeless child.
See also
Extensive Definition
The word waif (from the Old French guaif, stray
beast) refers to a living creature removed, by hardship, loss or
other helpless circumstance, from his or her original surroundings.
The most common usage is to designate a homeless, forsaken or orphaned child, or someone whose
appearance is evocative of same.
As such, the term is similar to a ragamuffin or street
urchin, although the main distinction is volitional: a runaway youth might live on the
streets, but would not properly be called a waif as the departure
from one's home was an exercise of free will. Likewise, a person
fleeing their home for purposes of safety (as in response to
political oppression or natural disaster), is typically considered
not a waif but a refugee.
Literature
Orphaned children, left to fend for themselves, are extremely common as literary protagonists, especially in children's and fantasy literature. The children in A Series of Unfortunate Events are frequently waifs, in between their unsuccessful stints in the care of various relatives. Bret Harte's 1890 novel A Waif of the Plains, set against the backdrop of the Oregon Trail in the 1850s, is another example.The association of "waif" with thinness,
ill-health and/or somewhat ethereal qualities is a recurring
literary element, although such physical aspects are not inherent
in the term. Literary waifs are frequently depicted with a frail
appearance, often (particularly in fantasy genres) with
compensatory special abilities or powers. A "waif" in The
Edge Chronicles is a thin and rather weak creature who resides
in the deep wood, able to hear many sounds that other beings
cannot. Such evocations may reflect the endemic malnutrition of the
street
urchin, or be the result of an intention or accidental
conflation of the term with wraith, or spirit.
The Waif is a character in Jonathan
Lethem's story K for Fake from the story collection Kafka
Americana.
Nautical
In nautical terms, a waif is any survivor of a shipwreck compelled to make land upon a foreign shore. In this sense it is roughly synonymous with castaway, although the latter term is generally associated with isolation; a waif (in the nautical sense) usually indicates a survivor of a marine disaster who has fallen into the care and/or custody of others. "Some seven years ago...there appeared the remarkable saga of Manjiro, the shipwrecked Japanese waif who was rescued and brought to the United States by a Yankee whaling captain."The noun waif has a secondary nautical meaning,
referring to any message that has been received via flag signals.
However, in that context the etymology is most likely divergent,
springing instead from the Old Norse veif,
a back-and-forth movement.
Music
References to waifs in music are sometimes self-deprecating, as in the name of the Australian folk-rock band The Waifs, or Tracy Bonham's song "I'm Not a Waif."Many other songs use the word "waif" to
romanticize street
children and runaways,
as in the Marc Almond
song Waifs and Strays, or the Steely Dan
song Janie Runaway, which describes the title character as being
the "wonderwaif of Gramercy
Park."
Still other musical references to waifs stress
themes of deprivation
and vulnerability.
For example, in the Counting
Crows song "On Almost Any Sunday Morning", the character
singing the song describes himself as "Hungry like a wild / Waif or
only child".
Even more pointed was the use of the word by
Kurt
Cobain as a euphemism for sexual
assault. The title of the Nirvana song
"Rape Me"
appears as "Waif Me" in the printed liner notes of the Wal-Mart
version.
Botany
In botany, a "waif" is an unusual species found in the wild that is alien and either a) is unsuccessful at reproduction without human intervention, or b) only persists a few generations and disappears. Such a plant never gets "naturalized" in the wild. "Waif flora" also refers to plant species which occur on oceanic islands due to chance long-distance dispersion of seeds.Fashion
In fashion and related popular culture, the term "waif" has been used to describe an almost unhealthily thin person, usually a woman."The waif look" was used in the 1960s to describe
thin, large-eyed models
such as Twiggy and Dorothee
Bis. The "gamine"
look of the 1950s, associated with actresses like Audrey
Hepburn, Leslie Caron
and Jean
Seberg, was, to some extent, a precursor.
The term "waif" was seemingly ubiquitous in the
1990s, with heroin chic
fashion and models like Kate Moss and
Jaime
King on the runways and in advertisements. Actresses like
Ally
McBeal star Calista
Flockhart, Winona
Ryder, recently the British actress Keira
Knightley and singer Celine Dion
have all been pinned with the term.
Although the heroin chic look has gone out of
fashion, it still holds some popularity in Hollywood. For example,
Wonderbra
model Eva
Herzigova was criticized over her waif-like figure. Daily Mirror
columnist Sue Carroll
wrote: In 2006, Madrid's fashion week turned away underweight
models, based on their body mass
index, after protests that eating disorders develop among young
girls and women trying to copy their rail-thin looks.
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Arab,
beach bum, beachcomber, beggar, bo, bum, bummer, castaway, castoff, derelict, discard, dogie, flotsam, flotsam and jetsam,
foundling, gamin, gamine, guttersnipe, hobo, homeless waif, idler, jetsam, junk, lagan, landloper, lazzarone, loafer, losel, mudlark, orphan, piker, ragamuffin, ragman, ragpicker, refuse, reject, rounder, rubbish, ski bum, stiff, stray, street Arab, street urchin,
sundowner, surf bum,
swagman, swagsman, tatterdemalion, tennis
bum, tramp, trash, turnpiker, urchin, vag, vagabond, vagrant, waifs and strays,
wastrel