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  1. 4. According to Etymology Online, the use of "kid" to refer to a human child was established in informal English usage by 1812, but was used as slang (not sure what the difference is in connotation here between "informal" and "slang") as early as 1590. The term may have first been applied to human children in reference to similarities between a ...

  2. Nov 16, 2016 · So hard to say when wean became common but probably it was in use in C17th. wean n. a child, especially a young one. Scots has a number of words for children and young people, the most well-known being bairn and wean. While bairn is traditionally associated with dialects of the north and east of Scotland, wean is more often found in the south ...

  3. kid (n.) kid. (n.) c. 1200, "the young of a goat," from a Scandinavian source such as Old Norse kið "young goat," from Proto-Germanic *kidjom (source also of Old High German kizzi, German kitze, Danish and Swedish kid), a word of uncertain origin. The extended meaning "child" is recorded as slang by 1590s, established in informal usage by 1840s.

  4. In the 1750s we see it gaining a new name, slang, and a new, linguistic branch of development opens up for that word. In 1756 we are told that ‘Thomas Throw had been upon the town, knew the slang well’, had worked as an attendant in gambling dens, ‘and understood every word in the scoundrel’s dictionary’. 1758 gives us our first ...

  5. Sep 28, 2023 · Origins of “Kid” in English. The word “kid” has its origins in the Old Norse word “kith,” which means “young goat.”. In Old English, the term “kidd” was used to refer to a young child or a young person. Over time, the word “kid” became more commonly used to refer to children in general, regardless of their age.

  6. Jan 5, 2022 · 20. A Good Voice to Beg Bacon. Telling someone they’ve “ a good voice to beg bacon ” is effectively the 17th-century version of “don’t quit your day job.”. 21. Gut-Foundered. Extremely ...

  7. cild in Dictionary of Old English. chīld, n. in Middle English Dictionary. I. With reference to state or age. I.1.a. Old English–. An unborn or newly born human being; a fetus, an infant. In early use occasionally contextually: a male infant (cf. quot. OE 1). The primary sense appears to have been ‘fetus’.

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