释义 |
diddy noun- a toilet AUSTRALIA, 1958
Perhaps originally a fanciful term used when speaking with small children. Also variant “didee”. - “Well”, his missus tells him, “having the didee in the backyard isn’t very convenient,” the wife says. — Frank Hardy, The Yarns of Billy Borker, p. 56, 1965
- Burglar Bill entered the first diddy, put down the empty can and tugged at the full one. — Frank Hardy, The Outcasts of Foolgarah, p. 150, 1971
- — Arthur Chipper, The Aussie Swearer’s Guide, p. 33, 1972
- the female breast or nipple UK
Recorded in Glasgow use by Michael Munro, The Original Patter, 1985, and in Australia by James McDonald, A Dictionary of Obscenity, Taboo and Euphemism, 1988. - If Sophia Loren came up to yeh an’ stuck her diddies in your face would you say tha’ she was nice enough? — Roddy Doyle, The Van, p. 255, 1991
- a fool; used as a mild insult UK, 1985
Glasgow slang, from sense 2, and therefore a TIT- — Michael Munro, The Original Patter, 1985
- a gypsy UK
A familiar diminutive of DIDICOI - To make things worse, he said, one “diddy” was a “tealeaf” [thief][.] — Butch Reynolds, Broken Hearted Clown, p. 30, 1953
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