buddy

See also: Buddy

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /bʌd.i/
  • (file)
  • Rhymes: -ʌdi

Etymology 1

1802, colloquial butty (companion), also the form of an older dialect term meaning workmate, associated with coal mining. Itself believed derived from 1530 as booty fellow, a partner with whom one shares booty or loot.[1] Alternatively, an alteration of brother.[2][3]

Noun

buddy (plural buddies)

  1. A friend or casual acquaintance.
    Synonyms: bud, mate; see also Thesaurus:friend
    They have been buddies since they were in school.
  2. A partner for a particular activity.
    Synonyms: companion, partner
    drinking buddies
  3. An informal and friendly address to a stranger; a friendly (or occasionally antagonistic) placeholder name for a person one does not know.
    Synonyms: mate, fellow
    Hey, buddy, I think you dropped this.

Pronoun

buddy

  1. (In Maritime English) A person far removed from the conversation.
    I found some earphones in the pocket, buddy must have been pissed.
    Buddy's loaded. 'Got like three houses.
Derived terms
Translations

Verb

buddy (third-person singular simple present buddies, present participle buddying, simple past and past participle buddied)

  1. (transitive) To assign a buddy, or partner, to.
    • 2007, Philip Briggs & Danny Edmunds, Mozambique: The Bradt Travel Guide, →ISBN, page 86:
      If you are being formally buddied, have a good chat with your buddy and find out their interests -- these should more or less match your own.

Etymology 2

From Middle English buddy, buddi, equivalent to bud + -y.

Adjective

buddy (comparative more buddy, superlative most buddy)

  1. Resembling a bud.
    • 1963, John Herbert Goddard, Chrysanthemum Growers' Treasury (page 18)
      Some of the dwarfer varieties are full of buddy growths in the early stages and these must be cut down and thrown away.

References

  1. Douglas Harper (2001–2023), buddy”, in Online Etymology Dictionary, retrieved November 2008.
  2. buddy”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.
  3. buddy”, in Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary
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