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 Rachid84b
 
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							| Hi everyone, 
  Does the word "aunt-in-law" exist in English or no?  |  7 Nov 2013      
					
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 Aurore
 
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							| Hi As a native speaker I �ve never heard it and I wouldn �t say it either. She �s just an aunt. simple. |  7 Nov 2013     
					
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 Lovely Lana
 
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							| It does, as far as I know Your spouses aunt and uncle would be your aunt and uncle in laws
 I�m not a native speaker, I�ve just seen it somewhere
 
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 Rachid84b
 
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							| Thank you "Aurore" and "Lovely Lana" 
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 dareka1
 
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							| From yahoo answers- 
 I use them, but most people don �t. In-Law is usually only for brothers, sisters and parents. We commonly say "Aunt by marriage" and "Uncle by marriage" when such a distinction is necessary, as in "I don �t know much about the Kablonski family; Ralph there is my uncle by marriage, to my mother �s sister Matilda". 
 "Cousin-in-Law" is good for introductions at family reunions, but "Ralph, my cousin Matilda �s husband" is clearer.
 
 
 
 If you are never sure, just google the term in quotation marks and see how many hits there are (usually more hits, more likely it is a correct word). |  7 Nov 2013     
					
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 yanogator
 
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							| It might exist, but it isn �t used in any official sense.   Bruce |  7 Nov 2013     
					
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 Doot
 
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							| I agree with Bruce. I have never heard of aunt-in-law. 
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 Mex233
 
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							| With respectful awareness that English is spoken differently in different parts of the world, I can definitively say that the term is not used in the northeast United States where I have been a native speaker of English for sixty-five years.  I am not sure how it would be understood.  As the aunt of your spouse?  As the wife of your mother or father�s brother?  Instead, try using the people�s names if they are known to the listener, eg, �Bob�s Aunt Mary� or �my Uncle Richard�s wife, Beth� or just, �my husband�s or wife�s aunt or �my uncle�s wife,� depending on whom you mean. |  8 Nov 2013     
					
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 Jayho
 
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							| I �ve never heard it used |  8 Nov 2013     
					
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