biodaughter
English
Etymology
Noun
biodaughter (plural biodaughters)
- A biological daughter.
- 1993 August 16, Barbara Ehrenreich, “Want a Child? Take My Son”, in Jason McManus, editor, Time, volume 142, number 7, New York, N.Y.: Time Inc., →ISSN, →OCLC, page 68, column 2:
- Do the Schmidts or the Twiggs (who are battling for switched-at-birth biodaughter Kimberly in Florida) realize that the flip side of the Child as Genetic Property is the Child as Perpetual Liability?
- 1996 January 2, Lyn, “Not For Step-Moms Only”, in alt.support.step-parents[1] (Usenet), archived from the original on 18 September 2025:
- For me the NMKNMR [Not My Kid, Not My Responsibility] philosophy holds great appeal, but I have found it very difficult to maintain when I have tried to employ it. Usually, these periods come when I am at the end of my rope and can't stand whatever is going on. I withdraw, focus on my biodaughter, with whom I do have clear influence and a solid relationship.
- 2001, Peter Gerlach, “Accept Your Stepfamily Identity”, in Stepfamily Courtship: How to Make Three Right Re/marriage Choices, [Bloomington, Ind.]: Xlibris, →ISBN, part 2 (Seven Courtship Projects), page 210:
- Well-intentioned, Jack strove to treat his stepdaughter “no differently” than his biokids. He unrealistically expected her to respect and obey (“love”) him like his biodaughter Annie.