Citations:milk sibling

Noun: "a person who is not one's biological sibling but was nursed by the same woman as oneself (e.g., the child of one's wet nurse)"

 * 1952 — Mark Zborowski & Elizabeth Herzog, Life Is with People: The Jewish Little-Town of Eastern Europe, International Universities Press (1952), page 326:
 * Her own child is the "milk sibling" of the one she has nursed.
 * 1990 — Ruth C. Busch, Family Systems: Comparative Study of the Family, Peter Lang (1990), ISBN 9780820410883, page 121:
 * The Koranic prohibition on marriage to a milk sibling is the cause of trouble in some cases.
 * 1992 — Jane Khatib-Chahidi, "Milk Kinship in Shi'ite Islamic Iran", in The Anthropology of Breast-Feeding: Natural Law or Social Construct (ed. Vanessa Maher), Berg Publishers Limited (1995), ISBN 9780854968145, page 112:
 * The parents of the children will exchange visits, favours and gifts; when the milk siblings grow up, they will be expected to be on close terms with each other throughout their adult life.
 * 2004 — Rebecca Popenoe, Feeding Desire: Fatness, Beauty, and Sexuality Among a Saharan People, Routledge (2004), ISBN 0415280966, page 94:
 * But knowingly to marry someone who is a milk sibling is, as Sidi told me gravely, to go against Islam.
 * 2009 — Ina May Guskin, Ina May's Guide to Breastfeeding, Bantam Books (2009), ISBN 9780553384291, page 233:
 * This means that a young woman who would have to be veiled in the presence of any men outside her immediate family would not be required to wear the veil in the presence of a "milk sibling."
 * 2012 — Leonore Davidoff, Thicker Than Water: Siblings and Their Relations, 1780-1920, Oxford University Press (2012), ISBN 9780199546480, page 43:
 * The belief that a special relationship united babies breastfed by the same woman made them milk siblings. Their children, in turn, might regard their parents' milk sibling as an honorary aunt or uncle,