Promiscuous (from Latin promiscuus “without distinction, taken from every different type”) has a range of meanings in English. The oldest of these is “composed of all sorts of persons and things” (as in “a promiscuous array of books” or “the promiscuous company at the tavern”). This meaning suggests a random assortment, not necessarily with negative implications.
Within the last few hundred years, promiscuous has added the usually negatively-tinged meanings “indiscriminate” (“promiscuous destruction by bombing”), “casual or careless” (“the president’s promiscuous dishonesty”), and of course, “not restricted to one sexual partner.”
Does this mean that the word itself is promiscuous? Not at all. It is not uncommon for English words to display this polysemous (“having multiple meanings”) character, and promiscuous is actually on the tidy end of the spectrum, as far as these things go.
From Wiktionary:
From Latin prōmiscuus (“mixed, not separated”), from prō (“forth”) + misceō (“mix”).
1. Made up of various disparate elements mixed together; of disorderly composition.
Synonym: motley
2. Made without careful choice; indiscriminate.
3. (derogatory) Indiscriminate in choice of sexual partners, or having many sexual partners.
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