释义 |
▪ I. Dutchy, n. colloq. (orig. U.S.).|ˈdʌtʃɪ| Also Dutchee, Dutchie. [f. Dutch a., n. + -y6.] A familiar or contemptuous name for a Dutchman or a German.
1835C. F. Hoffman Winter in West II. 165 Where's Yankee and Dutchee? the bacon and greens are smoking on the table. 1864J. T. Trowbridge Cudjo's Cave (1868) iv. 18 See here, Dutchy! ye hain't been foolin' us, have ye? 1888M. Grigsby Smoked Yank xvi. 139 Then some one behind would yell: ‘Go it, Dutchie.’ 1901Daily Chron. 12 Aug. 6/1 The captain of the ship insulted him by saying, ‘Here's another Dutchy who wants to be an American.’ 1949Sci. Monthly July 44 Among Western ‘civilized’ peoples we hear the constant use of such terms as..‘nigger’, ‘Dutchy’, ‘flip’, ‘greaser’, [etc.]. 1959Amer. Speech XXXIV. 225 Nicknames in Australian lower-class society... Dutchy, a German. ▪ II. ˈDutchy, a. [f. Dutch + -y1.] Dutch-like.
1862A. Gray Lett. (1893) 495, I was..copying out Grisebach's manuscripts for the printer (for the printer won't touch the Dutchy-looking thing). 1893J. H. Ross in King's Business (New Haven, Conn.) 127 The faces [in Rembrandt's Scripture pictures] are not ideal but Dutchy. |