How the Misuse Spread: A Brief Historical Outline
Anthropology (late 19th–early 20th century)
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The term hypergamy originally emerges in anthropological research on marriage systems.
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It describes marrying upward in caste or class hierarchies, especially in South Asian kinship structures.
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It applies exclusively to marriage, not sexual behavior, not dating, not mate preference.
Sociology (mid-20th century)
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The term expands to describe marital unions such as:
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educational hypergamy
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income hypergamy
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Again: strictly marital.
Early Evolutionary Psychology (1980s–2000s)
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Researchers studied female mate preferences for resources, status, dominance, and protection, but:
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They did not use the word “hypergamy.”
Instead, they described mate choice or resource-acquisition preferences.
Online Manosphere and Pop-EP (2000s–2010s)
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Bloggers and early “red-pill” communities encountered the word hypergamy in sociological texts and misinterpreted it as meaning:
“Women always prefer the highest-status man.”
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The marriage-specific nature of the term was lost.
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The term spread memetically through:
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blogs
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forums
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YouTube commentary
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popular EP explainers
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The Result
A term that had always meant “marrying upward” was suddenly being used to describe non-marital mating and sexual behavior, creating a large-scale conceptual mistake.
Why This Is a Linguistic Error: The Catachresis Problem
This widespread misuse is an example of catachresis—using a word in a way that contradicts its actual meaning or domain.
The root problem is etymological:
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Hypergamy derives from Greek gamos = marriage.
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It does not refer to sexual choice.
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It does not refer to attraction.
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It does not refer to dating, hookups, or general mate preference.
Using a marriage-specific term to describe general sexual or romantic behavior is a category mistake. It is like trying to describe casual sex with the word “matrimony” ; the semantic field simply does not match.
What Hypergamy Actually Means
Hypergamy = hyper + gamos
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hyper- = upward
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gamos = marriage
The literal meaning is:
“Upward marriage.”
Historically, academically, and etymologically, this term belongs to:
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caste-marriage systems
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class-based marital mobility
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formal marital unions
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sociological studies of marriage patterns
It does not belong to:
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dating
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short-term mating
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hookups
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sexual attraction
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romantic preference
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evolutionary mate choice contexts
The modern evolutionary-psychology usage is therefore incorrect.
What Evolutionary Psychology Actually Describes
Evolutionary psychology does not focus primarily on marriage, but on mating strategies:
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short-term mating
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long-term mating
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sexual preferences
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romantic attraction
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mate competition
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extra-pair mating
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resource-based selection
These behaviors are much older than marriage, which is a relatively recent cultural institution.
So EP is fundamentally describing mate choice, not marriage choices.
The everyday statement:
“Women prefer the highest-status man available.”
…describes a mating preference, not a marriage rule.
Thus the term “hypergamy” is inappropriate for EP’s purposes.
The Correct Word: Hypergyny
If we need a term to describe female upward mate preferences across all relational contexts—sexual, romantic, or marital—then we need a term built from the correct root.
That term already exists: hypergyny.
Hyper– + gyne (woman)
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gyne = woman
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NOT marriage
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Unlike gamos, it has no marital connotation.
Literal meaning:
“A woman moving upward.”
Hypergyny therefore correctly refers to:
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any upward-directed female mate preference
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attraction to higher-status or higher-resource males
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upward selection in dating, mating, romance, or sex
It describes the very thing EP commentators mean without importing the erroneous assumption of marriage.
Comparison Table
| Term | Root | Literal meaning | Proper domain | Accurate for EP’s female mating strategy? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hypergamy: | gamos = marriage | “Upward marriage” | Marriage systems, caste/class unions | No. Using it for general mating is catachresis. |
| Hypergyny: | gyne = woman | “Woman moving upward” | Any female upward-oriented choice | Yes. Matches EP’s concept of status-oriented mate choice. |
Conclusion
The modern discourse on female mating strategies has been built on a linguistic mistake.
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Hypergamy has always meant upward marriage.
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Evolutionary psychology is about mate choice, not marriage systems.
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The popular EP usage of “hypergamy” is therefore a misuse, a category error, and a clear case of catachresis.
The scientifically and linguistically correct term is:
Hypergyny
—female upward mate preference across all sexual and romantic contexts.
Correcting this terminology not only improves clarity but also prevents the confusion that occurs when marriage-specific words are used to describe non-marital mating behavior.