straightfolk

English

Etymology

From straight + folk.

Noun

straightfolk pl (plural only)

  1. (informal) Straight (heterosexual) people.
    Antonym: gayfolk
    • 1994, Thomas O'Neil, Sex with God, page 45:
      turning down one sheet / in our little room / while down below / the straightfolk come and go / looking for stray sons after dark.
    • 2015 February 26, “The hart”, in Arkansas Times:
      Here is a story for you, Straightfolk of Straightworld: In May 1895, the great writer Oscar Wilde was put on trial in London for the crime of sexual indecency with other men.
    • 2019 September 16, Joshua Young, “In the Spotlight with The Public Theater’s Emerging Writer’s Group”, in The Brooklyn Rail:
      This ancient idea that the most "universal" (or, cough, American) story is one contingent on the problems of wealthy white, cis, straightfolk is very much still alive and thriving.
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