biddy
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈbɪdi/
Audio (southern England) (file) - Rhymes: -ɪdi
Etymology 1
Derived from Biddy, diminutive form of Bridget. It became a generic name for an Irish maid (US), and then for an old woman.
Noun
biddy (plural biddies)
- (derogatory) A woman, especially an old woman; especially one regarded as fussy or mean or a gossipy busybody.
- (uncommon) An attractive girl.
- (archaic, colloquial) An Irish maidservant.
- (by extension, derogatory) An Irishwoman.
- A name used in calling a hen or chicken, often as "biddy-biddy-biddy".
- c. 1601–1602, Shakespeare, William, Twelfth Night, act 3, scene 4, line 115:
- Ay, biddy, come with me.
- 1915, Burgess, Thornton W., chapter XI, in The Adventures of Chatterer the Red Squirrel, Boston: Little, Brown, and Company:
- "Well, we'll see about it by and by," said Farmer Brown's boy. "There's the breakfast bell, and I haven't fed the biddies yet."
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- breasts (when used in the phrase "tig biddies" derived from "big tiddies")
- 2005 Rejected: You Never Know What You're Gonna Get - Page 29
- It ain't like you ain't never seen these tig ole biddies before.
- 2005 Rejected: You Never Know What You're Gonna Get - Page 29
Derived terms
Translations
a woman, especially an old woman; especially one regarded as fussy or mean or a gossipy busybody
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an attractive little girl
Noun
biddy (plural biddies)
- (US) Alternative spelling of bitty.
- 1952, Ralph Ellison, Invisible Man, Penguin Books (2014), page 210:
- “Was it in buckets or them little biddy cans?”
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