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Relationships

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When does a boyfriend become a partner?

26 replies

mathsgsceresit · 30/08/2014 17:30

When does someone go from BF to DP?

I am dating someone - I would call him a boyfriend, he calls himself my boyfriend but my friend just called him my partner.

I don't think someone I have been dating for 3 months and hasn't met my kids is a partner and it made me think - when does someone become a partner from a boyfriend/girlfriend?

OP posts:
GoodboyBindleFeatherstone · 30/08/2014 17:33

When you want to, not when someone else thinks you should.

My partner has always referred to himself as my partner because he reckoned "boyfriend" made us sound about 16. He didn't like it so I didn't use it.

Iconfuseus · 30/08/2014 17:34

I agree with you, I think it's a bit quick to call someone your partner after just 3 months.

When someone tells me they have a partner I assume they are referring to someone whom they have made a serious commitment with and a deep level of involvement e.g. living together, shared property, even children. Like a marriage in a way.

I don't think you can put a time frame on it. Two people can be together for years and only really be boyfriend and girlfriend (or boyfriend & boyfriend or girlfriend & girlfriend) whereas two other people might become partners after six months.

That's just my two pence worth however.

purplemurple1 · 30/08/2014 17:36

For me when your lives are integrated - so rather than arranging nights out together you tell each other if your out doing something else that night. Although you don't necessarily have to be living together.
But I would say you need follow each other's families to the level you can look after each other's kids.

thesaurusgirl · 30/08/2014 17:37

When living at the same address and named on a tenancy agreement or mortgage.

My company extends the same privileges (BUPA, death in service etc) to partners as spouses and this is the distinction.

However, you could argue that our definition covers flatmates - and we definitely don't insure those!

BackforGood · 30/08/2014 17:38

What iconfuseus said.
Its ore about the commitment than the length of time.

KittenOverlord · 30/08/2014 17:40

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mathsgsceresit · 30/08/2014 17:40

Thanks - that all chimes with what i think

OP posts:
FolkGirl · 30/08/2014 17:40

I agree, I think that a partner is someone who you are going through life with together. A boyfriend/girlfriend is someone you are going through life with alongside.

insancerre · 30/08/2014 17:41

To me a partner is someone you share your life with
You have a home together and children
You share a past and have plans for the future
A partner to me is like a marriage but without being married

Cantbelievethisishappening · 30/08/2014 17:42

For some on here.... after a month Grin
I hate the term 'partner'. Don't know why..... just really grates...put it up there with 'date nights' for hated relationship linked terms.

IMO when two people are living together and possibly have some sort of joint financial commitments, a child together ..... hard to know really. It's quite subjective. I think time plays a part.
I guess everyone has different ideas on this.

mathsgsceresit · 30/08/2014 17:46

I hate partner and boyfriend but I don't know what else to call him?

But he is definitely not a partner. Yet. Grin

OP posts:
DollyMixture99 · 30/08/2014 17:48

When someone tells me they have a partner I assume they are referring to someone whom they have made a serious commitment with and a deep level of involvement e.g. living together, shared property, even children. Like a marriage in a way.

This

scottishmummy · 30/08/2014 17:51

Theres an age aspect.saying boyfriend over 20something does sound schoolgirlish
But i suppose i think partner is long term thing,maybe cohabitate,plan to have kids etc

HeartsTrumpDiamonds · 30/08/2014 18:01

Partner to me is either engaged or living together or both - lives entwined etc.

Other words -
Beau (very American)
Suitor (old fashioned)
Special friend (boak)
My man (works well with a Scottish accent)

KittenOverlord · 30/08/2014 18:45

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Message withdrawn at poster's request.

ArsenicyOldFace · 30/08/2014 18:49

Long term or living together.

It was a term coined to replace common law husband/wife (more or less).

BertieBotts · 30/08/2014 18:49

I think it's supposed to be short for "life partner" ie practically married which is why it was used in the gay community before gay marriage was legalised. But some people (including me sometimes) use it as a catch-all to mean "husband, wife, lover, boyfriend, girlfriend, fiancé(e), latest shag, you know what I don't remember, or whatever".

LRDtheFeministDragon · 30/08/2014 18:50

For me, when you're over the age of 21!

I think teenagers have 'boyfriends'.

I'd probably say 'the man I'm seeing' or something equally crap, though, as I'd not be calling someone my 'partner' if I'd not been with them long.

PeppermintCream · 30/08/2014 18:50

Someone I work with uses the term "my squeeze" for boyfriend - I really like it.

LetticeKnollys · 30/08/2014 18:57

Depends on how you define partner.

Often, it means "cohabiting partner" in which case you need to live together. That's how I tend to think of it, too.

I have heard couples over 35 or so say that they think boyfriend/girlfriend sounds a bit teenagerish for them, so probably in that situation people tend to use it earlier.

TerrifiedMothertobe · 30/08/2014 19:14

When it feels right!

For me it was well after we had bought a house, maybe after 4 years together? Then he became my fiancé, and now my sexy husband! Yay!

hamptoncourt · 30/08/2014 20:41

I agree with kitten , any man I have been dating who I wasn't engaged or married to was my boyfriend, even in my forties.

A partner is someone you are in business with.

Don't even get me started on "other half"

Stalks off muttering to self..........

King1982 · 31/08/2014 11:26

When you are in a partnership

brokenhearted55a · 31/08/2014 11:31

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brokenhearted55a · 31/08/2014 11:32

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