释义 |
Definition of babymother in English: babymothernoun The mother of one or more of a man’s children, who is not his wife or current partner. I knew his babymother, Miss Richards, as we went to school and grew up together Example sentencesExamples - She told him to leave his babymother to date another woman.
- He is working with Marley on a song called Diamonds, which he is clearly excited about and describes it as being ‘bad, bad, bad… it's giving thanks to the mothers, the daughters and the babymothers.’
- In 2006, little Timmy from number 24 not only snorts more coke than Tony Montana, but he also has 2 babymothers and probably drives a much better car than you.
- Eventually, one of his babymothers got tired of having to raise her son off her small paycheck and took him to court for not financially supporting the child.
- The massive popularity of the black genre fiction published by imprints like Payback and the X-Press is evidence of a reading public hungry for British-set stories of yardies, babymothers, true players and dancehall queens.
- If he is a married man, what sort of incriminating things could his babymother be seeing at his house?
- He has a girlfriend and a baby-mother.
- He has other kids and he lets his babymothers disrespect me.
- When he first met her, he was heavily involved with his babymother.
- I have several kids by different babymothers.
- He goes around asking his friends and his "babymother" for dough to buy a moped.
- Happy Mother's Day to all the babymothers!
- Buy little gifts for the child and offer to drop them off yourself so that the baby-mother is assured that you exist and that your relationship with her ex is serious.
- Being black is a burden because of the stereotypes of keeping it real in the ghetto, living in the yard, and having ‘bare’ (lots of) babymothers.
- However just like my babymother they all want the World and are usually not prepared to do anything about it themselves.
Origin 1960s: from baby + mother, after babyfather; originally in Caribbean English. Definition of babymother in US English: babymothernounˈbābēˌməT͟Hər The mother of one or more of a man’s children, who is not his wife or current partner. I knew his babymother, Miss Richards, as we went to school and grew up together Example sentencesExamples - If he is a married man, what sort of incriminating things could his babymother be seeing at his house?
- The massive popularity of the black genre fiction published by imprints like Payback and the X-Press is evidence of a reading public hungry for British-set stories of yardies, babymothers, true players and dancehall queens.
- Being black is a burden because of the stereotypes of keeping it real in the ghetto, living in the yard, and having ‘bare’ (lots of) babymothers.
- He is working with Marley on a song called Diamonds, which he is clearly excited about and describes it as being ‘bad, bad, bad… it's giving thanks to the mothers, the daughters and the babymothers.’
- However just like my babymother they all want the World and are usually not prepared to do anything about it themselves.
- When he first met her, he was heavily involved with his babymother.
- He has other kids and he lets his babymothers disrespect me.
- He goes around asking his friends and his "babymother" for dough to buy a moped.
- Eventually, one of his babymothers got tired of having to raise her son off her small paycheck and took him to court for not financially supporting the child.
- I have several kids by different babymothers.
- She told him to leave his babymother to date another woman.
- In 2006, little Timmy from number 24 not only snorts more coke than Tony Montana, but he also has 2 babymothers and probably drives a much better car than you.
- Happy Mother's Day to all the babymothers!
- Buy little gifts for the child and offer to drop them off yourself so that the baby-mother is assured that you exist and that your relationship with her ex is serious.
- He has a girlfriend and a baby-mother.
Origin 1960s: from baby + mother, after babyfather; originally in Caribbean English. |