/ˈdæd.i/
OriginFrom dad + -y (diminutive suffix).
- childish, usuallyFather.
- informalA perfect example, a role model.
“the daddy of them all”
“[Norman Mailer] was, though, absolutely the daddy of faction, his novels or journalism reporting every conflict from 1939 to Iraq and biographising Americans including John F Kennedy, Marilyn Monroe, ”
- informalA male lover.
“She looked at me with that familiar desire
Her eyes lit up like they were on fire
She said, "My name's Flo, and you're on the right track,
But look here, daddy, I wear furs on my back,
So if you want ”
- dated, slangAn informal term of address for a man.
“Rock 'n' roll is cool, daddy, and you know it!”
- A dominant male partner, often used as an address.
“The guy I've been dating offered to do bondage with me, and I was like "Yes please, daddy."”
“The very attractive Daddy-type in the harness and cap.”
- slangA male juvenile delinquent in a reformatory who dominates the other inmates through threats and violence.
“However, what is of interest is that it is clear that the staff have to use the prisoners to run the borstal and thus do not object to, or try to control the inmate subculture that produces 'daddies',”
“The daddies were the chaps of the old borstal system, leaders who had clawed their way to the top of the borstal food chain by showing gameness and the ability and willingness to inflict serious viole”
- obsolete, slangA stage manager.
- obsolete, slangThe person who gives away the bride at a wedding, in the absence of her actual father.
- obsolete, slangAn accomplice selected to win the prize in a fraudulent raffle or lottery.
- obsolete, slangThe man in charge of a casual ward, generally an elderly pauper.
- Appalachia, transitiveTo father; to sire.
“"Just supposin' Mister has daddied a pup here and there," said old man Rivers. "What's wrong with that? Ain't your foxhounds han'some and hard-runnin'?" "But they all pint birds," said my Pa. "Whoever”
“Grieving apparently wasn't a full-time job, however, since Hank up and married a gal named Billie Jean and daddied a daughter by yet another consoler.”
- informal, uncommonResembling or characteristic of a dad.
“In 1989, Hollywood brought us Field of Dreams, one of the daddiest dad movies ever.”
“Stark flinched and fired, and he wished, instead, that he’d held the revolver in the kid’s face, telling the frightened boy to drop his rifle in the loudest, deepest, daddiest voice he could muster.”
“Curiously, many of the younger dads were more comfortable saying that they listen to dad rock, while older dads were more defensive about it, despite pledging allegiance to some of the daddiest classi”
- childish, colloquialOne's father.
“Jenny's voice broke. “Daddy told me that she and Joey, my baby brother, were killed when I was two.””
Formsdaddies(plural) · daddie(alternative, Scotland, often) · daddies(present, singular, third-person) · daddying(participle, present) · daddied(participle, past) · daddied(past) · daddier(comparative) · daddiest(superlative)