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The old include the obvious (Louis) and less obvious (a one-of-a-kind musical origin story), but the new arrives in the form of the mysterious Gabriella (Jennifer Ehle), Lestat’s undead mother whose thirst for blood ranks a distant second to her nymphomania.—Ben Travers, IndieWire, 7 June 2026
Word History
Etymology
borrowed from New Latin, from nymphae "labia minora" (plural of Latin nympha "nymph of mythology," borrowed from Greek nýmphē "bride, young woman, nymph of mythology," [in medical writers of the early centuries A.D.] "clitoris") + -o--o- + -mania-mania — more at nymph
Note:
The originator of Latin nymphomania is unknown, though discussions of this supposed ailment, more frequently called furor uterinus (literally, "frenzy of the uterus"), are common in medical literature of the sixteenth to eighteenth centuries. The word was certainly in circulation by 1627, when it was used by François Ranchin (1560-1641), French physician and chancellor of the University of Montpellier, in Tractatus de morbis virginum ("Treatise on the infirmities of virgins") included in his Opuscula medica (Lyon, 1627). Ranchin's analysis is under the heading "De furore uterino Virgineo, seu nymphomania" ("Concerning the uterine disturbance of virgins, or nymphomania").