single word requests - A parent who has more than one child with one or more partners: "Poly-what?"
A polyglot is someone who can speak many languages; something that is polychromatic has many colours, and polysemy is a word or phrase with multiple meanings
If polygamy is having more than one wife or husband at the same time, but a polygynist refers only to a man who has many wives. If polyandry is having more than one husband and a polygamist is usually a man who has more than one wife at the same time.
What do you call a "multiple father" or "multiple mother", someone who has more than one child with the same partner? And what do you call a parent who has two or more children with two or more different partners?
Answer
The closest poly-word that I found which has documented usage is the following: polyphiloprogenitive
Meaning:
adjective: Extremely prolific.Etymology:
From Greek poly- (many) + philo- (loving) + Latin progenitive (producing offspring), from pro- (toward) + past participle of gignere (to beget). Earliest documented use: 1919, in a poem by T.S. Eliot.Usage:
"Polyphiloprogenitive Joe Fallon, the needy, breedy father of seventeen, or was it nineteen? I was never sure, any more than Joe himself."
Aidan Higgins; Dog Days; Secker & Warburg; 1998."All spring and summer my parents ricochet from garden to garden, mulching, watering, pulling up the polyphiloprogenitive weeds, 'until', my mother says, 'I'm bent over like a coat hanger."
Margaret Atwood; Bluebeard's Egg; McClelland & Stewart; 1983.
Alternatively the Latin term philoprogenitive
- producing offspring, especially abundantly; prolific.
- of, relating to, or characterized by love for offspring, especially one's own.
1860-65; philo- + progenitive
Sources: A.Word.A.Day; Phrontistery; Worthless Word For The Day aka WWFTD; Wiktionary, Random House Dictionary and Merriam-Webster
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