单词 | teddy |
释义 | teddyn. 1. Short for teddy bear n. 1. Frequently as a proper name for a teddy bear. ΘΠ society > leisure > entertainment > toy or plaything > soft toy > [noun] > specific baa-lamb1599 bear1905 teddy bear1906 teddy1907 shmoo1948 1907 New Eng. Mag. July 629/2 The Teddy-bear..suggests to the imaginative owner whatever special being his fancy would have ‘Teddy’ personify. 1910 Postcard caption [to picture of a little girl scrubbing a teddy bear.] You dirty Teddy. 1924 A. A. Milne When we were very Young 90 Then said, ‘Excuse me,’ with an air, ‘But is it Mr. Edward Bear?’ And Teddy, bending very low, Replied politely, ‘Even so!’ 1934 E. Tietjens in Child Life May 214/2 I always find things I'd forgotten, An old brown Teddy stuffed with cotton. 1940 D. Wheatley Faked Passports xxii. 262 It seemed a rotten business to shoot that harmless Bruin which was so reminiscent of a large teddy in a children's toyshop. 1960 Sunday Times 3 Jan. 30/3 My aunt..brought two brown teddies from Vienna in 1904, and in 1905 my mother bought me a white one in Ipswich. 1963 Sunday Express 10 Mar. 4/3 Look at teddy—he's got new fur. 1979 Guardian 14 June 12/3 I would rather fulfil my role as a mother than have a teddy act as a substitute. 2. [Perhaps < the name of Theodore Roosevelt.] (See quot. 1925.) ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > armed forces > the Army > unit of army > named companies, regiments, etc. > [noun] > American Pennsylvania division1779 blue hen's chicken (also chick)1840 Mormon battalion1847 teddy1917 1917 E. Pound Let. 25 Aug. (1971) 118 The Morning Chronicle assures me my compatriots are called ‘Teddies’, which is one in the eye for Mr. Woodie Wilson. 1925 E. Fraser & J. Gibbons Soldier & Sailor Words 279 Teddies, the, one of the names for the U.S. troops on first landing in France; disliked by the Americans equally with ‘Sammies’, and soon dropped. 3. Originally and chiefly North American. [perhaps transferred use of sense 1] A woman's undergarment combining chemise and panties. Also in plural teddies. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > underwear > [noun] > combined clothing for upper or lower parts of body combination1684 union suit1868 combination garment1884 combi1891 pantywaist1910 cami-knickers1915 cami-petticoat1923 teddy1924 cami-bocker1926 corselette1926 combs1931 all-in-one1939 body stocking1964 teddy bear1978 1924 H. C. Witwer in Cosmopolitan (U.K. ed.) May 122/2 She added..she'd personally get enough enjoyment out of standing before her mirror garbed in a sheer silk teddy to warrant any sacrifice. 1929 Amer. Speech 4 422 There is an article of feminine wearing apparel, a sort of overall piece of underwear, I believe, which is known as a teddy. I would suppose that this was so-called from its real or fancied resemblance in general shape (or shapelessness) to the teddy-bear. 1934 J. T. Farrell Young Manhood (1936) xi. 298 Slug whispered to a big..blonde Polack in pink teddies. 1949 Gilbreth & Carey Cheaper by Dozen xvii. 206 Anne..bought silk stockings, two short dresses and four flimsy pieces of underwear known as teddies. 1949 Gilbreth & Carey Cheaper by Dozen xvii. 208 She doesn't even wear a teddy. 1977 Hartford (Connecticut) Courant 6 June 24/4 Teddys are no longer synonymous with teddy bears alone. They also represent the sexiest lingerie around... The teddy is a camisole and tap pants set combined. The chemise bodice, often fashioned after a camisole, unbuttons either in the front or back... The all-in-one feature of teddys has made them more popular as sleepwear. 1978 Chatelaine Dec. 72/2 (caption) Left: A body-smoothing teddy with deep insets of lace by Emilio Pucci/Formfit Rogers, $30. 1983 Daily Tel. 17 Dec. 10/4 The silver satin ‘teddy’ we picture is one of this Christmas's best-sellers. 4. Short for Teddy boy n. ΘΠ the mind > attention and judgement > fashionableness > [noun] > specific fashions > follower of specific fashion moon child1923 bodgie1949 Ted1956 teddy1956 neatnik1959 mod1960 rocker1963 longhair1964 yé-yé1964 sharpie1965 hippie1966 punk1976 neo-hippie1980 New Romantic1980 1955 Britannica Bk. of Year 489/2 Teddy-boy, Teddy-gang and Edwardian were terms used half derisively to describe youths who affected an Edwardian style of dress and who sometimes formed themselves into hooligan or criminal gangs.] 1956 Saturday Bk. 213 Our modern ‘teddies’ are named after their Edwardian clothes—dress in the manner of the times of King Edward VII—popularly known as ‘King Teddy’. 1958 People 4 May 12/3 ‘He'd treat you real good,’ said this Teddy. 1960 N. Mitford Don't tell Alfred i. 8 His clothes had been distinctly on the Teddy side. 1963 J. Fowles Collector ii. 165 We saw a group of teddies standing round two middle-aged Indians... The teddies were shouting, chivvying and bullying them off the pavement on to the road. 1968 Daily Tel. 29 Nov. (Colour Suppl.) 20/3 ‘I introduced the Teddy lark down our street,’ he recalls. ‘I was the first to wear the Eton Clubman chukka-boot with the one-and-three-quarter-inch crepe sole.’ This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1911; most recently modified version published online June 2022). < n.1907 |
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