Wet nurse

Origin of: Wet nurse

Wet nurse

Originally, from the early 1600s, a wet nurse was a woman employed to suckle the infant of another, the opposite of a dry nurse who looked after an infant, but did not suckle it. By the late 18th century, wet nurse was being used figuratively as a verb meaning to attend to a person with excessive care and devotion, as if caring for a helpless infant.