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I am interested in why and how the word kid started being used to discribe a child or young person, can anybody help me ? — This unsigned comment was added by 125.239.18.78 (talk) at 10:30, 17 February 2009.
I'm saying this completely out of the blue, but the Dutch/German word kind ("child") may have played a role. Sailors or other travellers may have picked up this word and merged it with the native kid.
Verb
Latest comment: 5 years ago3 comments2 people in discussion
The difference is in the grammar. A transitive verb includes a direct object: "I kid you." By contrast, an intransitive verb does not take a direct object "I kid."
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2. Of a female goat, the state of being pregnant: in kid.
is this used outside of the phrase "in kid"? if not, doesn't it belong at in kid? I can't find "in (a|the) state of kid", nor "kid state" with this meaning.
13. (vulgar, slang, usually in the plural) semen, ejaculate.
is this used outside of the general, vulgar equation of sperm to children by which you can plug any word meaning child into phrases about leaving your potential/unborn/future google:"children all over her face"? do we consider that kind of use to make kid, child, baby etc idiomatically mean sperm? (maybe?)