| 单词 | boy | 
| 释义 | boyn.1int. A. n.1  1.   a.  A male servant, slave, assistant, junior employee, etc.Often with implication of relative youth, and hence not readily distinguishable from senses  A. 3a   and  A. 3c.Frequently as the second element in compounds, as house-boy, link-boy, office boy, post boy, pot-boy, etc.: for established compounds see the first element.  (a) In general use. Now rare except in some former British colonies. ΘΚΠ society > authority > subjection > slavery or bondage > 			[noun]		 > slave theowc893 thrallc950 young manOE slavec1290 boyc1300 servanta1325 bondc1330 bondmana1340 manciplea1387 man's-bond?a1400 thrillc1480 thrillmanc1480 serf1483 bondservant1535 bondslave1561 bondling1587 slave-boy1607 slave-labourer1607 chattel1649 bondsman1713 livestock1755 esne1819 thirl-man1871 task-labourer1897 c1300						 (?c1225)						    King Horn 		(Cambr.)	 		(1901)	 l. 1075 (MED)  				He com to þe gateward þat him answerede hard..þe boye [c1300 Laud, a1350 Harl. porter] hit scholde abugge; Horn þreu him ouer þe brigge. c1330    in  T. Wright Polit. Songs Eng. 		(1839)	 341 (MED)  				A boy for to bere a lettre. a1375						 (c1350)						    William of Palerne 		(1867)	 l. 1705  				Sche..borwed boiȝes cloþes..& bogeysliche as a boye, busked to þe kychene. a1439    J. Lydgate Fall of Princes 		(Bodl. 263)	  ii. l. 1033  				With his suerd[e], but she [sc. Lucretia] wolde assent, Hire and a boy he wolde prente ifeer. c1440						 (?a1400)						    Morte Arthure l. 3122  				Boyes in þe subarbis bourden full heghe. 1480    G. Cely Let. 24 Nov. in  Cely Lett. 		(1975)	 102  				Ytt ys so that Y do send Harry my boye to whayght appon my brodyr this Crystmesse. 1535    Bible 		(Coverdale)	 1 Sam. ii. 13  				The prestes boye came, whyle the flesh was seething. 1601    F. Tate Househ. Ord. Edward II 		(1876)	 §94. 56  				That none of the kings meignee..charetter or sompter boy..keepe his wife at the court. 1651    T. L. To Church of Rome in  Πολύπενϑεος Θρηνωδία 9  				By David his Boy, whom his heart approved. 1675    Char. Town Misse 6  				And now being arrived at the Zenith of her Glory, she has her Boys in Livery, her House splendidly furnisht, and scorns to stir abroad without a Coach and six. 1721    P. Aubin Life Madam de Beaumount ii. 36  				I resolved to continue in the Cave, with my two Servants, my Maid, and a Boy, whom I had brought from France. 1764    T. Jefferson Corr. in  Wks. 		(1859)	 I. 190  				You mention one [letter] you wrote last Friday, and sent by the Secretary's boy. 1860    Amer. Law Reg. 8 567  				Witness says that he heard nothing more of them, except that a boy was sent down for liquor, and witness had to get bar-checks for the boy. 1912    E. Wharton Reef 		(1914)	 199  				Darrow..saw the doctor's old-fashioned carriage by the roadside. ‘Let me tell the doctor's boy to drive you back,’ he suggested. 1939    Fortune Oct. 80/1  				Twenty-one years ago President W. Warren Humphrey..started as a stock-room boy. a1961    E. Hemingway Garden of Eden 		(1987)	  iv. xxviii. 233  				‘Immediately after Monsieur and Madame left,’ Madame Aurol said. ‘She sent the boy to the station for the ticket and to reserve a wagon-lit.’ 1971    R. Russell tr.  A. Ahmad Shore & Wave xv. 161  				Boy, three chhota pegs. 1973    T. Pynchon Gravity's Rainbow  i. 37  				‘Why does he go out and pinch all his dogs in person? He's an administrator, isn't he? Wouldn't he hire a boy or something?’ ‘We call them “staff”,’ Roger replies. 2002    H. Igboanusi Dict. Nigerian Eng. Usage 65  				I have been staying in my bookshop since this year because my boys have become very dishonest.  (b) Used (chiefly by white people) with reference to non-white slaves and (in English-speaking colonies) to non-white servants, labourers, etc. Also as a form of address (esp. as a summons). Now historical and rare (usually considered offensive). ΘΚΠ society > authority > subjection > service > servant > types of servant > 			[noun]		 > Indian or Chinese boy1625 society > authority > subjection > service > servant > types of servant > 			[noun]		 > black black boy1594 boy1625 Cape boy1892 Stepin Fetchit1940 society > authority > subjection > slavery or bondage > 			[noun]		 > slave > black jong1615 servant1643 New Negro1701 salt-water Negro1708 boy1796 blackbird1853 intelligent contraband1861 contraband1862 1625    W. Hawkins in  S. Purchas Pilgrimes I.  iii. vii. 211  				My Boy Stephen Grauener. 1628    World Encompassed by Sir F. Drake 55  				We met a Spaniard with an Indian boy, driving 8. Lambes or Peruvian sheepe. 1681    R. Knox Hist. Relation Ceylon 124  				We had a black boy my Father brought from Porta Nova to attend upon him. 1722    D. Defoe Moll Flanders 357  				About two Hours after he was gone, he sent me a Maid-Servant, and a Negro Boy to wait on me. 1796    tr.  A. von Kotzebue Negro Slaves  i. v. 22  				You are an old boy, I suppose you was sold for a couple of yards of linen, and some bottles of brandy. ?1796    Periodical Accts. Missions Church United Brethren 1 274  				Baas Teunis having left a draught of oxen here at pasture in coming to the town, they were now put to the waggon, and the former driven behind us by a Hottentot boy. 1812    A. Plumptre tr.  H. Lichtenstein Trav. S. Afr. I.  i. viii. 119  				A Hottentot..expects to be called by his name if addressed by any one who knows it; and by those to whom it is not known he expects to be called Hottentot..or boy. 1834    E. Markham N.Z. Recoll. 		(1963)	 72  				They picked out two of the strongest of the Boys (as they call the Men) about the place. 1852    H. B. Stowe Uncle Tom's Cabin II. xxx. 166  				‘Now up with you, boy! d'ye hear?’ said the auctioneer to Tom. 1876    E. Thorne Queen of Colonies 58  				The blacks who work on a station or farm are always, like the blacks in the Southern States, called boys. 1907    N.Y. Evening Post 		(Semi-weekly ed.)	 13 May 6  				The register clerk [at a Shanghai hotel] assigns you to a room, and instead of ‘Front!’ he shouts ‘Boy!’ 1943    D. Welch Maiden Voy. xviii. 145  				I noticed that everything was covered with a fine, sandy dust. I thought that the coolies and Boys must be very lazy. 1960    Northern Territory News 		(Darwin)	 5 Feb. 5/5  				Aborigine Wally..described himself as ‘number one boy’ at the station. 2000    New Straits Times 		(Malaysia)	 		(Nexis)	 8 Oct. 12  				Proudlock was acting headmaster of the Victoria Institution, and..they had three servants—‘boy’, ayah and cook. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > warrior > camp follower > 			[noun]		 rascal1539 lackey1556 boy1572 soldier's boy1611 camper1631 lix1665 retainer1784 camp-follower1810 1572    J. Sadler tr.  Vegetius Foure Bks. Martiall Policye  iii. vii. f. 32v  				If any water be rough and boysterous, or the chanell verye broade, it manye times drowneth the carriages and the boyes and nowe and then slouthfull and lyther souldiours. 1600    W. Shakespeare Henry V  iv. vii. 1  				Godes plud kil the boyes and the lugyge, Tis the arrants peece of knauery. a1616    W. Shakespeare Henry V 		(1623)	  iv. iv. 72  				The French might haue a good pray of vs, if he knew of it, for there is none to guard it [sc. the luggage] but boyes .       View more context for this quotation 1647    C. Cotterell  & W. Aylesbury tr.  E. C. Davila Hist. Civill Warres France  iv. 245  				With the same readinesse the Admirall following and all the chief Officers of the Army, and from hand to hand the Gentlemen, with the common souldiers, and even the footmen and boyes in the Camp, they made up the Sum of 30000 crowns.  c.  A non-white male. Now usually considered offensive (as being associated with sense  A. 1a(b)). ΚΠ 1821    E. S. Pigot Jrnl. 45 in  Dict. S. Afr. Eng. on Hist. Princ. 		(1996)	 124/3  				The Bush boy took off all the gentlemen; we danced more, then he took off the Ladies, made us laugh very much. 1864    Lady Duff-Gordon in  F. Galton Vacation Tourists & Trav. 1862–3 215  				Yes, madam, it is shocking here how people treat the blacks. They call quite an old man ‘boy’, and speak so scornfully. 1888    L. D. Powles Land of Pink Pearl 66  				Every darky, however old, is a boy. 1952    Here & Now 		(N.Z.)	 Jan. 21  				‘D'ere d'hino,’ said the Maori boy at the pool table. 1973    Black Panther 8 Sept. 7/2  				Guards [in Alabama] still use the term ‘boy’ to refer to Black prisoners. 1992    Weekly Mail 		(Johannesburg)	 24 Apr. 32  				Some of the correspondents who helped him with bursaries referred to him as a ‘boy’... ‘That was a different era.’  d.  A junior military rank in various forces; a person of this rank. Now historical. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > hostilities in the air > airman > 			[noun]		 > boy boy1841 1841    Times 6 May 5/4  				Wounded... Lieutenant Bowers, severely. 1 Boy, 1st class, severely. 1918    Army Orders Nov. 35  				The following additional column will be inserted in the table of corresponding ranks..Royal Air Force..Air Mechanic, 3rd Class. Private, 2nd Class. Clerk, 3rd Class. Boy. 1924    R.A.F. King's Regulations I. p. vii  				Airman, or Airmen. These words, wherever they occur, will be held to include a warrant officer, a N.C.O., an aircraftman, and a boy. 1947    Jrnl. Royal Statist. Soc. 110 34  				We have Rating Group 3, much the largest in the Navy, and consisting of Able Seaman, Ordinary Seaman, Boy 1st Class and Boy 2nd Class. 1963    Times 30 Apr. 16/2  				He joined the Navy as a boy second class in 1898. 1996    T. Copp  & R. Nielsen No Price Too High  i. 34/2  				Then battle dress was issued. There were three of us with the rank of boy in the unit and we were the last to get it. ΘΚΠ the mind > goodness and badness > inferiority or baseness > roguery > rogue > 			[noun]		 harlot?c1225 truantc1290 shreward1297 boyc1300 lidderon13.. cokinc1330 pautenerc1330 bribera1387 bricouna1400 losarda1400 rascal?a1400 custronc1400 knapea1450 sloven?a1475 limmerc1485 knavatec1506 smaik?1507 smy?1507 koken?a1513 swinger1513 Cock Lorel?1518 pedlar's French1530 varletc1540 losthope?c1550 makeshift1554 wild rogue1567 miligant1568 rogue1568 crack-halter1573 rascallion1582 schelm1584 scoundrel1589 scaba1592 bezonian1592 slave1592 rampallion1593 Scanderbeg1601 roly-poly1602 canter1608 cantler1611 gue1612 fraudsman1613 Cathayana1616 crack-hempa1616 foiterer1616 tilt1620 picaro1622 picaroon1629 sheepmanc1640 rapscallion1648 scaramouch1677 fripon1691 trickster1711 shake-bag1794 sinner1809 cad1838 badmash1843 scattermouch1892 jazzbo1914 society > morality > moral evil > wickedness > roguery, knavery, or rascalry > 			[noun]		 > rogue, knave, or rascal harlot?c1225 knavec1275 truantc1290 shreward1297 boinarda1300 boyc1300 lidderon13.. cokinc1330 pautenerc1330 bribera1387 bricouna1400 losarda1400 rascal?a1400 knapea1450 lotterela1450 limmerc1485 Tutivillus1498 knavatec1506 smy?1507 koken?a1513 swinger1513 Cock Lorel?1518 pedlar's French1530 cust1535 rabiator1535 varletc1540 Jack1548 kern1556 wild rogue1567 miligant1568 rogue1568 tutiviller1568 rascallion1582 schelm1584 scoundrel1589 rampallion1593 Scanderbeg1601 scroyle1602 canter1608 cantler1611 skelm1611 gue1612 Cathayana1616 foiterer1616 tilt1620 picaro1622 picaroon1629 sheepmanc1640 rapscallion1648 marrow1656 Algerine1671 scaramouch1677 fripon1691 shake-bag1794 badling1825 tiger1827 two-for-his-heels1837 ral1846 skeezicks1850 nut1882 gun1890 scattermouch1892 tug1896 natkhat1901 jazzbo1914 scutter1940 bar steward1945 hoor1965 c1300    Havelok 		(Laud)	 		(1868)	 l. 1899 (MED)  				Þer mithe men wel se boyes bete..And hauelok on hem wel wreke. c1330    in  T. Wright Polit. Songs Eng. 		(1839)	 335 (MED)  				Knihtshipe is acloied..Kunne a boy nu breke a spere, he shal be mad a kniht. And thus ben knihtes gadered of unkinde blod. c1330    Seven Sages 		(Auch.)	 		(1933)	 l. 1217  				Was nowt þe boi of wit bireued. c1405						 (c1395)						    G. Chaucer Friar's Tale 		(Hengwrt)	 		(2003)	 l. 22  				An Erchedekne..hadde a Somnour, redy to his hond. A slyer boy, nas noon in Engelond..To telle his harlotrye, I wol nat spare. c1410						 (c1350)						    Gamelyn 		(Harl. 7334)	 l. 488 (MED)  				It is moche skaþe, boy, þat þou art on lyue! a1450    York Plays 		(1885)	 257  				Sir knyghtys, do kepe þis boy [sc. Peter] in bande. ?a1475    Ludus Coventriae 		(1922)	 227 (MED)  				Þus a bey to a jentylman to make comparycion. 1562    W. Bullein Bk. Simples f. 76, in  Bulwarke of Defence  				Through a very vile coward or boie, often the valiaunt man is slaine. 1588    ‘M. Marprelate’ Oh read ouer D. Iohn Bridges: Epist. 30  				Calling him boy, knaue, varlet, slanderer. a1616    W. Shakespeare Coriolanus 		(1623)	  v. vi. 103  				Auf. Name not the God, thou boy of Teares... Corio. Measurelesse Lyar, thou hast made my heart Too great for what containes it. Boy? Oh Slaue. 1683    in  Notes & Queries 		(1854)	 1st Ser. 9 15/2  				A sort of vicious idle and masterless boyes and rogues commonly called the Black~guard..do usually haunt and follow the Court.  3.   a.  A male child or youth. Also: a son, irrespective of age (chiefly as referred to by members of the immediate family).Sometimes restricted to male children below the age of puberty, or below the school-leaving age. ΘΚΠ the world > people > person > young person > youth or young man > 			[noun]		 frumberdlingc1000 young manOE childc1225 hind1297 pagec1300 youtha1325 fawnc1369 swainc1386 stripling1398 boy1440 springaldc1450 jovencel1490 younkera1522 speara1529 gorrel1530 lad1535 hobbledehoy1540 cockerel1547 waga1556 spring1559 loonc1560 hensure1568 youngster1577 imp1578 pigsney1581 cocklinga1586 demy1589 muchacho1591 shaver1592 snipper-snappera1593 callant1597 spaught1598 stubble boy1598 ghillie1603 codling1612 cuba1616 skippera1616 man-boy1637 sprig1646 callow1651 halflang1660 stubbed boy1683 gossoon1684 gilpie1718 stirraha1722 young lion1792 halfling1794 pubescent1795 young man1810 sixteener1824 señorito1843 tad1845 boysie1846 shaveling1854 ephebe1880 boychick1921 lightie1946 young blood1967 studmuffin1986 the world > people > person > child > boy > 			[noun]		 knightc893 knapec1000 knaveOE knape childc1175 knave-childa1225 groom?c1225 knight-bairnc1275 pagec1300 mana1382 swainc1386 knave-bairna1400 little mana1425 man-childa1438 boy1440 little boya1475 lad1535 boykin1540 tomboya1556 urchin1556 loonc1560 kinchin-co(ve)1567 big boy1572 dandiprat1582 pricket1582 boy child1584 callant1597 suck-egg1609 nacketc1618 custrel1668 hospital-boy1677 whelp1710 laddie1721 charity-boy1723 pam-child1760 chappie1822 bo1825 boyo1835 wagling1837 shirttail boy1840 boysie1846 umfaan1852 nipper1859 yob1859 fellow-my-lad?1860 laddo1870 chokra1875 shegetz1885 spalpeen1891 spadger1899 bug1900 boychick1921 sonny boy1928 sonny1939 okie1943 lightie1946 outjie1961 oke1970   Promptorium Parvulorum 		(Harl. 221)	 35 (MED)  				Bye or boye: Bostio. a1475    Friar & Boy 		(Brogyntyn)	 in  J. O. Halliwell Early Eng. Misc. 		(1855)	 48  				‘To the fylde schalle go the chyld’..Furthe than went the lytelle boy. c1475    Wisdom 		(Folger)	 		(1969)	 65 		(stage direct.)	 (MED)  				Here rennyt owt..vi small boys. 1535    Bible 		(Coverdale)	 Zech. viii. 5  				The stretes of the citie shalbe full of yonge boyes and damselles [1382 Wyclif infauntes and maydens; 1388 yonge children and maidens; 1611 boyes and girles]. ?1548    J. Bale Comedy Thre Lawes Nature  iii. sig. Cvijv  				Come, axe me blessynge, lyke praty boyes apace. 1549    in  W. Greenwell Wills & Inventories Registry Durham 		(1860)	 II. 132  				I give vnto my wife my house vnto my boy be of xxiiij yeirs of age. 1579    T. North tr.  Plutarch Liues 56  				This boye who was made ouerseer of them, was commonly twenty yeres of age. 1598    W. Shakespeare Love's Labour's Lost  iv. i. 119  				When King Pippen of Frannce was a litle boy .       View more context for this quotation 1653    I. Walton Compl. Angler ii. 46  				The very boyes will learn to talk and  swear.       View more context for this quotation 1671    J. Sharp Midwives Bk.  v. i. 233  				A woman delivered of a Boy, must continue in her purification thirty three dayes, and for a girl sixty six days. 1711    J. Swift Jrnl. to Stella 7 Mar. 		(1948)	 I. 208  				I find I was mistaken in the sex, 'tis a boy. 1752    S. Johnson Rambler No. 198. ⁋3  				The sailor hated to see tall boys shut up in a school. 1812    Ld. Byron Childe Harold: Cantos I & II  ii. xxiii. 72  				Ah! happy years! once more who would not be a boy? 1844    A. B. Welby Poems 		(1867)	 97  				A noble sturdy boy is he, and yet he's only five. 1866    S. B. Warner Word I. xvii. 219  				Driven from home, her boy put out of his birthright, disowned and disgraced, she felt no doubt very forlorn. 1908    R. Brooke Poet. Wks. 		(1970)	 155  				The thing must End. I am no boy! I am No boy!! being twenty-one. 1945    E. Waugh Brideshead Revisited  i. i. 27  				That..was Lord Sebastian Flyte. A most amusing young gentleman... The Marquis of Marchmain's second boy. 1989    M. Dorris Broken Cord iv. 65  				I continually struggled to understand my little boy as he grew older. 2007    Voice 16 Apr. 30/2  				I honestly do feel that my boys are missing out big time on that father figure.  b.  colloquial. In expressions of encouragement, admiration, etc. Esp. in  that's my boy,  that's the boy (see that pron.1 1b(a)).In quot. 1575   addressed to a dog. ΚΠ 1575    G. Gascoigne Noble Arte Venerie xxxix. 107  				If he perceiue that his hounde draw right, let him clappe him on the side & cherish him, saying, Thats my boy, thats he, thats he. 1594    W. Shakespeare Titus Andronicus  iv. i. 109  				I thats my boy, thy father hath full oft, For his vngratefull Countrie done the  like.       View more context for this quotation a1625    J. Fletcher Bonduca  iv. ii, in  F. Beaumont  & J. Fletcher Comedies & Trag. 		(1647)	 62  				That's my boy, my sweet boy. 1715    H. Carey Contrivances 25  				Boy. I pick'd it out of my Master's Coat-Pocket, Sir, this Morning... Rove. That's my Boy—there, there's Mony for you. 1829    W. N. Glascock Sailors & Saints I. 212  				‘That's the boy!’ cried the boatswain's-mate, who..was as rank a fatalist as most of his superstitious profession—‘that's the boy, that always brings the luck.’ 1831    J. Hardiman Irish Minstrelsy 79  				They cry he's the boy, our darling and joy, Still ready to sport, or to court, or to toy. 1884    Catholic World Dec. 417  				‘That's the boy, Tom,’ said Larry Jot approvingly; ‘you're able to take care of 'em like a man.’ 1902    J. J. Bell Wee Macgreegor ii. 13  				‘If a beast wis gaun fur to pu' ma heid aff,’ remarked Macgregor, who had grown suddenly bold, ‘I-I-I wud—I wud gi'e't a kick!’ ‘Ye're the boy!’ said his father. 1932    E. Wallace When Gangs came to London ii. 26  				‘Ain't you the boy!’ he said. 1962    H. Hood in  R. Weaver Canad. Short Stories 		(1968)	 2nd Ser. 205  				John's the boy. Oh, he's a sharp lad is John. 1992    P. McCabe Butcher Boy 		(1993)	 62  				Right come on up here Philip and show the class. That's the boy. Good lad Philip. Watch carefully now everyone.  c.  In playful, affectionate, or slighting use: a young man, a fellow. Also as a form of address.Also as the second element in compounds (in many of which the suggestion of youth has largely or entirely disappeared), as city, golden, lover, nature, wide boy, etc.: see the first element.For earlier similar affectionate use to a horse see quot. c1405 at sense  A. 4b. ΚΠ 1579    E. Spenser Shepheardes Cal. Apr. 155  				Ah foolish boy, that is with loue yblent. 1599    W. Shakespeare Romeo & Juliet  iii. i. 130  				Thou wretched boy that didst consort him here, Shalt with him  hence.       View more context for this quotation 1600    W. Shakespeare Much Ado about Nothing  v. i. 79  				If thou kilst me, boy, thou shalt kill a  man.       View more context for this quotation 1722    Daily Post 19 Mar.  				He is a fat, chubby boy, aged about 20 or thereabouts. a1791    J. Wesley Serm. lxxxiii, in  Wks. 		(1811)	 IX. 434  				Every one has his hobby-horse! Something that pleases the great boy for a few hours. 1863    C. Reade Hard Cash III. iii. 90  				I love you with all my soul, Alfred; I worship the ground you walk on, my sweet, sweet boy. 1883    R. Broughton Belinda I.  i. i. 46  				Rivers looks at her; looks at her as a wholesome minded and bodied boy of twenty-two does look at his first love. 1893    O. Wilde Let. ?Jan. 		(1962)	 326  				My Own Boy, Your sonnet is quite lovely. 1934    ‘N. West’ Cool Million xix. 135  				Listen, boy,..see this gat? Well, if you don't behave I'll drill you clean. 1989    Washington Post 		(Nexis)	 15 July  a19  				A world in which women have the power to dictate what toys the boys will buy to assert their manhood. 2001    L. Rennison Knocked out by Nunga-nungas 119  				Yesssssss! Owzat!!!!!!! The boy's a genius!  d.  A man, without connotation of age. Now chiefly regional except as the second element of compounds.Sometimes used spec. of unmarried men still living in their parents' home.Cf. backroom boy at back room n. b, cowboy n. 2b, good old boy n. at good adj., n., adv., and int. Compounds 1c, old boy n., wide boy n. at wide adj. Compounds 2. ΘΚΠ the world > people > person > man > 			[noun]		 churla800 werec900 rinkeOE wapmanc950 heOE wyeOE gomeOE ledeOE seggeOE shalkOE manOE carmanlOE mother bairnc1225 hemea1250 mother sona1250 hind1297 buck1303 mister mana1325 piecec1325 groomc1330 man of mouldc1330 hathela1350 sire1362 malea1382 fellowa1393 guestc1394 sergeant?a1400 tailarda1400 tulka1400 harlotc1405 mother's sona1470 frekea1475 her1488 masculinea1500 gentlemana1513 horse?a1513 mutton?a1513 merchant1549 child1551 dick1553 sorrya1555 knavea1556 dandiprat1556 cove1567 rat1571 manling1573 bird1575 stone-horse1580 loona1586 shaver1592 slave1592 copemate1593 tit1594 dog1597 hima1599 prick1598 dingle-dangle1605 jade1608 dildoa1616 Roger1631 Johnny1648 boy1651 cod1653 cully1676 son of a bitch1697 cull1698 feller1699 chap1704 buff1708 son of a gun1708 buffer1749 codger1750 Mr1753 he-man1758 fella1778 gilla1790 gloak1795 joker1811 gory1819 covey1821 chappie1822 Charley1825 hombre1832 brother-man1839 rooster1840 blokie1841 hoss1843 Joe1846 guy1847 plug1848 chal1851 rye1851 omee1859 bloke1861 guffin1862 gadgie1865 mug1865 kerel1873 stiff1882 snoozer1884 geezer1885 josser1886 dude1895 gazabo1896 jasper1896 prairie dog1897 sport1897 crow-eater1899 papa1903 gink1906 stud1909 scout1912 head1913 beezer1914 jeff1917 pisser1918 bimbo1919 bozo1920 gee1921 mush1936 rye mush1936 basher1942 okie1943 mugger1945 cat1946 ou1949 tess1952 oke1970 bra1974 muzhik1993 1651    W. Davenant Gondibert  ii. iii. 102  				Gondibert (to whom the Court must bow, Now War is with your Fav'rite overthrown) Will by his Camp of Boys at Bergamo, Wed her, who to your Valour ows the Crown. 1663    T. Jordan Royal Arbor Loyal Poesie 6  				Cornish boyes be bold, Never lose your hold, He that loiters, Is by Traytors Basely bought and sold. 1745    J. Swift Dick's Variety in  Misc. X. 230  				Let the Boys pelt him if they dare. 1754    Sons of Ireland 9  				His exit will be with his neck in a loop, Surrounded with brave Newrey boys in a troop. 1834    Universal Songster I. 10/2  				No wonder that we Irish boys should be so gay and frisky. 1847    Paddiana I. 263  				Judge Moore having decided in my hearing, that in Ireland the word ‘Boy’ has no reference to age. 1863    J. Moreton Life & Work in Newfoundland 9  				The ‘boys’ in a fisherman's household are all the males, of whatever age, except the father or master. 1867    W. H. Dixon New Amer. i  				These Western boys (every man living beyond the Missouri is a Boy, just as every woman is a Lady). 1880    M. A. Courtney W. Cornwall Words in  M. A. Courtney  & T. Q. Couch Gloss. Words Cornwall 6/1  				There are no men in Cornwall; they are all Cornish boys. 1908    Westm. Gaz. 16 Oct. 11/2  				In Ireland anyone who is not married is called a boy... John Gillan, the ‘boy’, a sturdy young man, then gave evidence. 1911    A. Warrack Scots Dial. Dict.  				Boy, a male person of any age or condition, if unmarried and residing in the family home. 1971    G. J. Casey Traditions & Neighbourhoods 168  				Joey was no coward, but he was no Irish boy. 1985    L. Lochhead tr.  Molière Tartuffe 26  				This boay couldny love you mair. He's fairly burnin' tae be yir man. 2004    Irish Times 		(Nexis)	 26 Jan. 17  				I am told that the Duke of Devonshire and his wife were charmed at being thanked by a woman in a fishing-tackle shop: ‘Thanks, your grace, Mrs Devonshire. Good luck with the fishin', boy, and you too, girl.’ 2005    J. Aitken Porridge & Passion xi. 161  				‘I thought I recognized a Suffolk accent.’ ‘Well you're roight boy,’ said the Principal Officer relapsing into broad Suffolk.  e.  Appended to a male forename (esp. as a form of address). ΚΠ 1728    I. Dandridge Like will to Like I. xii. 27  				Ah dear Billy-boy, There wou'd be Days for you and I! 1889    B. Harte Cressy xiii. 278  				‘What is it, Johnny boy?’ asked the master tenderly. 1909    W. A. White Certain Rich Man xvi. 220  				He's too many for me—that Johnny boy is. I can't make him out. 1978    J. McGahern Getting Through 128  				Rise it, Jimmy. More power to your elbow, Jimmy Boy! 1989    T. Clancy Clear & Present Danger viii. 136  				Can you still cut it, Johnny boy? 2008    Gold Coast Bull. 		(Austral.)	 		(Nexis)	 3 Jan.  				Davey boy, your time was the result of your choices.  4.   a.  As a familiar form of address to a man.Formerly often with my, dear, old (see also old boy n. 1); this usage is now generally considered old-fashioned or upper-class. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > love > terms of endearment > 			[noun]		 > familiar form of address mon amic1425 matec1500 boy1532 old lad1594 old boy1602 captaina1616 mon cher1673 old chap1823 old man1828 ou maat1838 boysie1846 old top1856 boetie1867 bra1869 cocker1888 mon vieux1888 face1891 yessir1892 George1903 old sport1905 old bean1917 segotia1917 babe1918 bro1918 tovarish1918 old egg1919 midear1921 old (tin of) fruit1923 sport1923 mush1936 cowboy1961 coz1961 wack1963 yaar1963 John1982 1532    Remedy of Love in  Wks. G. Chaucer f. ccclxv  				If the yonge man speke, anon he saythe boye To rebuke age, besemeth the not ywis. 1565    A. Golding tr.  Ovid Fyrst Fower Bks. Metamorphosis  iii. f. 10v  				Feare not my boy (the Patrone sayd) no more but tell me where Thou doost desyre too go a lande. 1584    G. Peele Araygnem. Paris  iii. v. p. i  				My boy, I will instruct thee in a peece of poetrie, That happly erst thou hast not heard. a1616    W. Shakespeare Twelfth Night 		(1623)	  ii. iv. 119  				But di'de thy sister of her loue my Boy ?       View more context for this quotation a1616    W. Shakespeare Tempest 		(1623)	  ii. ii. 53  				To sea, boys, and let her goe  hang.       View more context for this quotation 1703    E. Ward Secret Hist. Calves-head Club 15  				Then Boys let's drink a Bumper, since their Actions made us great. 1726    C. Johnson Female Fortune-teller  iv. 64  				Sir Cha. How came you to act? Ring. Bagatelle, my dear Boy, no more Examination. 1771    T. Smollett Humphry Clinker III. 154  				Well done, my dear boy!—O bravo! 1823    W. Scott St. Ronan's Well I. xiii. 300  				I will have no objection in life to take Mr Tyrrel's place, and serve your occasion, my boy! 1895    S. Crane Red Badge of Courage xxi  				‘A feller named Wilson,’ he ses. There, Wilson, m'boy, put that in a letter an' send it hum t' yer mother, hay? 1938    F. D. Sharpe Sharpe of Flying Squad xix. 209  				‘Here they are, boys; get your tools ready.’.. As they ran they pulled weapons from under their coats. 1948    E. Waugh Loved One 3  				They don't expect you to listen. Always remember that, dear boy. 1969    ‘M. Innes’ Family Affair x. 117  				Come into my den, my dear boy. I've one or two things that ought to interest you. 2001    N. Weinstock As long as she needs Me 18  				Yeegads. Agents are vultures, my boy.  b.  As a familiar form of address to a male dog. Cf. quot. 1575 at sense  A. 3b. ΚΠ c1405						 (c1395)						    G. Chaucer Friar's Tale 		(Hengwrt)	 		(2003)	 l. 263  				That was wel twight myn owene lyard boy... Now is my Cart out of the slow pardee.]			 1829    Cambrian Q. Mag. 1 369  				Thou hast lost thy master, but I will find thee a new one: here, boy, here! 1844    S. Lover Treasure Trove 348  				‘Turlough! Turlough!—here boy!’ He began to talk to the dog in his own peculiar style. 1967    Delaware County 		(Pa.)	 Daily Times 30 June 11/2  				Go get it, boy, Harry, don't sit there and scratch. 1985    K. Fulves Self-working Paper Magic 72  				I say the magic words ‘Fetch, boy’. 2007    Guardian 		(Nexis)	 30 Oct. 31  				Fido! Din dins! Here boy!  5.  In plural. With reference to various bodies or loose associations of (young) men.  a.  With preceding defining word or phrase.  (a) In the name of a particular gang or band. Also in singular: a member of such a gang.For established compounds, as Oakboy, Peep o' Day Boys, Roaring Boys, wren-boys, etc., see the first element. ΘΚΠ society > law > rule of law > lawlessness > 			[noun]		 > crime > a criminal or law-breaker > collectively St Giles1714 boy1834 felonry1837 1614    J. Cooke Greenes Tu Quoque sig. C3  				This is no angry, nor no roaring boy, but a blustering boy. 1616    B. Jonson Epicœne  i. iv, in  Wks. I. 537  				The doubtfulnesse o' your phrase,..would breed you a quarrell, once an houre, with the terrible boyes .       View more context for this quotation 1744    D. Horsmanden Jrnl. in  N.Y. Conspiracy 		(1971)	 82  				It seems that..the confederates in each [district] were distinguished by the denomination of the Fly Boys and the Long Bridge Boys. 1772    London Chron. 18–21 Apr. 378/1  				The Steel Boys came and fired into the house. 1834    T. Carlyle Sartor Resartus  iii. x. 100/2  				In Ireland..Ribbonmen, Cottiers, Peep-of-day Boys. 1927    Amer. Mercury Nov. 360/1  				Streets over whose cobblestones the carriages of the aristocrats had rolled became nests of dives which sheltered the members of such celebrated river gangs as the Daybreak Boys. 1990    Toronto Star 		(Nexis)	 4 Feb.  a1  				The bawdy house was run by a gang called the Dai Huen Jai, or the Big Circle Boys, a crime organization that started in mainland China at the turn of the century. 2001    Observer 18 Mar. (Britain Uncovered Suppl.) 58/3  				The school became known as a recruiting ground for local gangs: the Brixton Boys, the Dulwich Crew and, more lately, the YPB (Young Peckham Boys).  (b) colloquial. More generally: men of the kind indicated by the defining element.backroom boys: see back room n. b. ΚΠ 1918    Stars & Stripes 29 Mar. 6/4  				Base and insidious reports to the effect that the Q.M. boys [i.e. the quartermaster's men] intend to get even by holding up the M.P.'s issue of cottons and summer lights until next November. 1937    A. Woollcott Let. 31 Oct. 		(1946)	 157  				It looks like an instance of clairvoyance which might be filed for reference with the extrasensory boys at Duke University. 1945    A. Huxley Time must have Stop 		(new ed.)	 xxx. 288  				Just a little bit of Wordsworth, say the blue-dome-of-nature boys. 1958    Spectator 7 Feb. 167/2  				The public relations boys could really go to town. 1963    R. Parker tr.  A. Solzhenitsyn One Day in Life of Ivan Denisovich 36  				Oh no, he wasn't ill, the security boys were keeping him back. 2001    B. Broady In this Block there lives Slag 100  				I watched the dipsos, the perverts, the wannabe pimps, the Care in the Community Boys..all beating their paths to her door.  b.  Without specifying word (esp. as  the boys).  (a) Ruffians, yobs, hooligans, thugs. Cf. b'hoy n. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > behaviour > bad behaviour > violent behaviour > 			[noun]		 > person tyrant1377 routera1500 termagant1508 ruffy?a1513 ruffiana1525 pander1593 thunderbolt1593 bully1604 ruffiano1611 tearer1633 violentoa1661 boy1662 violent1667 hardhead1774 Arab1788 ring-tailed roarer1828 blood-tub1853 tornado1863 stormer1886 hooligan1898 Apache1902 ned1910 rough-up1911 radge1923 goonda1926 pretty-boy1931 tough baby1932 bad-john1935 hoon1938 shit-kicker1954 tough boy1958 oafo1959 ass-kicker1962 droog1962 trog1983 1662    Life & Death Mrs. Mary Frith 79  				This was so famed and noysed all about Town that I durst not appear for the Boyes. 1664    T. Killigrew Parsons Wedding  v. iv, in  Comedies & Trag. 152  				Her Lady and she are coming, but in such a fury, I would not have the storm find you in the street; therefore I counsel you to avoid the boys, and take shelter in the next house. 1705    P. A. Motteux Amorous Miser  ii. i. 25  				Shou'd this report only..continue three or four days, you wou'd not be able to appear at your own Door for the Boys. Not at your own Door, Signior! a1790    B. Franklin Autobiogr. 		(1981)	 i. 7  				I was generally a Leader among the Boys, and sometimes led them into Scrapes. 1834    Knickerbocker 3 34  				The landlord after telling me not to mind the boys, went about his business. 1843    Punch 29 Apr. 179/2  				The comments and cheers of those very important members of street society, the boys. 1855    E. G. Squier Waikna iv. 92  				A figure approached, creating hardly less sensation among the people, than he would have done among the ‘boys’ in the Bowery. 1983    Times 25 July 11/3  				Ring back pronto, schmuck or I'll send the boys round to break both yer legs. 1991    Independent 		(Nexis)	 23 Feb. 15  				If you find out who done it, we'll send the boys round and kneecap them.  (b) Men of the armed forces; soldiers.See also boys in blue n. at blue adj. and n. Phrases 7b. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > warrior > soldier > 			[noun]		 > collectively boy1755 c1330						 (?a1300)						    Arthour & Merlin 		(Auch.)	 		(1973)	 l. 7064 (MED)  				Wawain hadde wiþ him..Of orped boies þousandes fiftene.]			 1755    A. Murray Let. 7 Oct. in  Nova Scotia Hist. Soc. Coll. 		(1883)	 III. 165  				If you will now Send Down a Good Parcel from your Districts, and Make your Boys Drive them this Length, I will take them off your hands. 1821    J. F. Cooper Spy I. xvi. 242  				I sould two of her quarters to some of your troop; but divil the word did I tell the boys what an ould frind it was they had bought. 1881    F. E. Weatherly Old Brigade 2  				Where are the boys of the Old Brigade? 1899    Congress. Rec. Feb. 1743/1  				Some of you..remember when at Vicksburg our boys got so close to the Confederates that they talked back and forth. 1918    in  F. A. Pottle Stretchers 		(1929)	 116  				Germans put over a box barrage entirely around the wood, hemming our boys in. 1959    M. Shadbolt New Zealanders 36  				The time when we would watch the boys swing, bayonets flashing,..towards the grey waiting ships. 1997    Esquire Feb. 14/1  				He returns this month to present a grunt's-eye-view of Bosnia and the boys of the 1st Armored Division's Dawg Pound Platoon.  (c) slang. The criminal fraternity; (sometimes spec.) the petty criminals frequenting a particular sporting venue, esp. a racecourse. Now rare. ΚΠ 1846    N.Y. Herald 8 Feb. 1/4  				‘Crib’ in Park Row, where..the ‘boys’ were playing the thimble rig, commonly called the little Joker. a1889    Bird o' Freedom 		(Sydney)	 in  A. Barrère  & C. G. Leland Dict. Slang 		(1889)	 I. 174/2  				Cleansing the rings from..those criminal scoundrels known as the boys. 1925    Brit. Weekly 12 Mar. 573/2  				Buy..small nuts and put them in your pocket with your cash. There isn't one of the boys can dip you [i.e. pick your pocket] then. 1937    Evening News 12 Mar. 15/6 		(advt.)	  				The twisters, the welshers, the ‘spivs’ and the ‘boys’ are getting ready for a profitable session of the gentle sport of rooking the racegoer. 1938    F. D. Sharpe Sharpe of Flying Squad i. 13  				Down goes the Squad the night before to greet ‘the boys’ at the turnstiles.  (d) colloquial. Members of a group sharing common (typically masculine) interests; one's (male) fellows or habitual companions. Esp. in  one of the boys: one who belongs to such a group; spec. one who conforms to its interests or practices, ‘a good sport’. Cf. lad n.1 Additions. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > love > friendliness > 			[noun]		 > one's fellows or habitual companions boy1850 the mind > emotion > love > friendliness > social intercourse or companionship > 			[noun]		 > quality of being a good fellow > good fellow or sport sport1881 one of the boys1893 1850    J. G. Saxe Addr. & Proc. 132  				I, who..Feel the natural pride of a dutiful son, And esteem it to-day, the proudest of joys, That, not less than yourselves, I am one of the boys! 1886    Lantern 		(New Orleans)	 8 Sept. 3/1  				When he happens in with the boys, he can enjoy himself. 1889    W. Skey Pirate Chief 195  				He goes on Sundays to the ‘pub.’ And sits among ‘the boys’. 1893    Ladies' Home Jrnl. Nov. 20/3  				She doesn't want to be treated like a lady because she wants to be ‘one of the boys’. 1930    P. G. Wodehouse Very Good, Jeeves vii. 192  				A chummy lion-tamer—a tamer who, after tucking the lions in for the night, relaxes in the society of the boys. 1969    New Yorker 3 May 64/3  				He doesn't do it by being one of the boys. That's not his nature. He's a lone wolf. 1984    S. Knight Brotherhood  ii. ix. 87  				He was liked and respected as ‘one of the boys’, and a very different kind of respect from that enjoyed by the absent Commissioner. 2006    Marie Claire 		(U.K. ed.)	 Oct. 162/3  				I would travel with him and the team,..and being with ‘the boys’ made it easier to forget than if we'd been wallowing at home. ΘΚΠ society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > a building > furniture and fittings > cupboard or cabinet > 			[noun]		 > other cupboards or cabinets Flanders chest1400 warestall1508 livery cupboard1571 boy1656 by-closet1696 corner-cupboard1711 India cabinet1721 pot-cupboard1789 housemaid's cupboard1843 monocleid1885 vargueño1911 console1925 cocktail cabinet1928 storage unit1951 1656    in  P. C. D. Brears Yorks. Probate Inventories 1542–1689 		(1972)	 113  				Two hogsheads six barrells, gantreyes and a boy with glasse bottles. 1763    in  J. Morris Adam Symes & his Descendants 		(1938)	 118  				1 Candle Boy, Canaster, Funnel, 7 old casks. 1781    in  P. C. Moore Inventory Hartlebury Castle 		(1960)	 65  				Damask Silk bed Chamber—7 Yellow Japann'd lampes 2 Trays 2 Candlesticks a writing boy.  7.  slang. Champagne. Usually with the. Now rare.				 [The origin of this sense is uncertain. Compare: 1890    J. S. Farmer Slang I. 313  				A story, ben trovato, is told by the Sporting Times of June 30, 1882, as regards the origin of the phrase:—At a shooting part in Norfolk once, a youth was told off to supply the company with champagne. The day being hot and the sportsmen thirsty, cries of ‘Boy! Boy! Boy!’ were heard all day long. This tickling the fancy of the royal and noble party, the term ‘boy’ became applied to champagne. 1935    Times 18 Nov. 10/5  				One still hears ‘The Boy’, and I believe such has been the case ever since ‘Veuve Clicquot’ became, for brevity's sake, ‘The Widow’. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > drink > intoxicating liquor > wine > French wines > 			[noun]		 > champagne champagne1664 Champagne wine1671 simkin1829 sham1848 fizz1864 widow1876 bubbly water1878 boy1882 bubble water1899 pink wine1900 bubbly1916 bubble?1920 champers1955 shampoo1957 1882    Punch 11 Feb. 69/1  				He'll nothing drink but ‘B. & S.’ and big magnums of ‘the Boy’. 1882    Punch 82 155/1  				Of course, beastly dinner, but very good boy. Had two magnums of it. 1929    Melody Maker Jan. 20/2  				Lord Delamere came up to them with a foaming magnum of champagne and said, ‘Well, boys! you've given us a glorious time! What do you say to a beaker of “the boy”?’ 1948    S. Sassoon Meredith vii. 86  				Sala..was every inch a Fleet Street Bohemian, and his convivial suggestion may be assumed to have been ‘What about a bottle of the boy?’  8.  U.S. slang. Heroin. Also with the, that. Cf. girl n. 10. Time (1951) 26 Feb. 24/2 records the use of the phrase ‘Do you need a boy?’ to ask drug dealers whether they have any heroin for sale. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > use of drugs and poison > an intoxicating drug > 			[noun]		 > a) narcotic drug(s) > morphine, cocaine, or heroin > heroin heroin1898 junk1921 dynamite1924 schmeck1932 smack1942 horse1950 gear1954 boy1955 sugar1956 chiva1964 scag1967 hoss1968 scat1970 P-funk1982 black tar1983 1955    Amer. Speech 30 86  				Boy, heroin, as opposed to girl, cocaine. 1960    C. Cooper Scene 12  				But now he had the boy; he could lie around up in his crib,..drugged to the verge of insensibility. 1993    D. Coyle Hardball  i. ii. 40  				Like most big dealers, Rat worked in both ‘girl’, or cocaine, and ‘boy’, or heroin. 2000    F.E.D.S. Mag. 2  vi. 61/1  				What kinds of drugs are they out there slinging?.. Everything from X to that Boy, but crack is still the biggest, that and weed.  B. int. colloquial (originally U.S.).   Expressing shock, surprise, excitement, appreciation, etc. Frequently used to give emphasis to the following statement.Frequently as  oh boy! (cf. oboy int.); also as  boy oh boy!, and sometimes with further reduplication. ΚΠ 1894    G. Ade Chicago Stories 24  				S-s-t! Boy! Same as last time. 1900    Nation 		(N.Y.)	 6 Sept. 194/1  				These biskits are light as a feather, but, boy, they'd be heavier 'n lead If I thought that my hosses was shiv'rin'. 1917    Amer. Mag. Mar. 13/1  				‘I told that dame I was Kid Hanlon.’..‘Oh, boy!’ I yells. 1930    D. H. Lawrence Nettles 17  				And they blushed, they giggled, they sniggered, they leered..and said: Oh boy!..that's pretty hot! 1932    Charleston 		(W. Va.)	 Gaz. 2 Apr. 6/2  				Of course, the above never really happened... But, boy, oh boy, oh boy, wouldn't a line like that knock an editor out of his chair? 1958    ‘N. Shute’ Rainbow & Rose i. 2  				I slithered in over the fence and put her [sc. the aeroplane] down and boy! was I glad to be on the ground! 1998    B. Kingsolver Poisonwood Bible 		(1999)	  ii. 123  				But, boy oh boy, let me tell you, they all have shoes. 2005    E. C. Irwin in  A. M. Weber  & C. Haen Clin. Applic. Drama Therapy Child & Adolescent Treatm. i. 15  				Once, when the big, bad guys were sent to jail, I said, ‘Oh, boy..what if in real life little people could be the boss of big people: wouldn't that be something!’ Phrases P1.    boys will be boys: used to express resignation regarding an (undesirable) aspect of the behaviour of a boy or young man, as being supposedly characteristic of his age or sex. Cf. girls will be girls at girl n. Phrases 1b. ΚΠ 1770    R. Griffith Lett. Henry & Frances 		(ed. 3)	 VI. dccxviii. 125  				Heaven bless them both!—though Jack is under a Cloud with me at present—but Boys will be Boys—and I endeavour to make my philosophy like yours—severe only to itself. 1797    Two Cousins 12  				I'll tell you what, Sarah, boys will be boys, do what we will, and it is not in their nature to like old people. 1847    W. M. Thackeray Vanity Fair 		(1848)	 xiii. 112  				And as for the pink bonnets..why boys will be boys. 1910    Times 8 Feb. 9/6  				Boys will be boys, and probably most of us when we were at school have done much the same thing many a time. 1964    P. G. Wodehouse Frozen Assets iii. 50  				I tried to tell him that boys will be boys and you're only young once. 1994    I. Welsh Acid House 125  				The guy who knifed the boy..well, silly bugger, but boys will be boys.  P2.    a.    boy-and-girl: (attributive) relating to or involving a boy and a girl; esp. in regard to a (youthful) love affair or romantic relationship. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > love > a lover > 			[adjective]		 > juvenile boy-and-girl1841 1841    C. Dickens Barnaby Rudge xxvi. 84  				I have found it necessary to take some active steps towards setting this boy and girl attachment quite at rest. 1870    L. M. Alcott Old-fashioned Girl viii. 132  				It's only a boy-and-girl fancy, that will soon die a natural death. 1934    P. Bottome Private Worlds v. 54  				It was what people called ‘a boy and girl affair’, but they can go quite deep. 2002    Times 		(Nexis)	 22 Jan.  				We had a true boy-and-girl affair: we went to the pictures, for trishaw rides, she cooked egg and chips for me..and we went swimming together off Changi Beach.  b.   humorous.  boys and girls: used as a form of address to a group of adults, esp. in imitation of a schoolteacher. ΚΠ 1913    Outlook 27 Dec. 892/1  				Now then, boys and girls,..this is Pete Crowther, the grocery salesman... I am going to give you some straight goods now about salesmanship, see? 1921    H. W. Witwer Leather Pushers x. 253  				Yes, boys and girls, Nada was a pulse quickener of the first water. 1988    ‘J. Norst’ Colors vii. 97  				Hey, boys and girls, did Uncle Bob make a fuckie-uppie here? 2007    Bellville 		(Illinois)	 News-Democrat 		(Nexis)	 7 May  				Now, boys and girls, can you say hypocrite?  c.    boy meets girl: used (chiefly attributive) with reference to a conventional or idealized romance.The extended phrase given in quot. 1935   is a line from the play  Boy meets Girl, by B. C. Spewack and S. Spewack, which was first performed in Philadelphia on 18 Nov. 1935. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > love > love affair > 			[noun]		 > with reference to copy-book romance boy meets girl1936 1935    N.Y. Times 6 Dec. 30/4  				As for the libretto [of ‘May Wine’], Mr. Mandel has done a suitable job, according to the ‘boy meets girl, boy loses girl, boy wins girl’ formula.]			 1936    N.Y. Times 12 Apr.  ix. 3/1  				You are star material on the screen in most cases only as long as you..can be worked into the ‘Boy Meets Girl’ formula. 1936    Zanesville 		(Ohio)	 Signal 28 Sept. 2/3  				The plot is the familiar boy meets girl theme. 1938    M. Blankfort in  W. Kozlenko One-act Play Today 82  				The social play is interested in boy meets girl. It is a situation which no one can or wants to avoid. 1947    Landfall  i. 45  				This immediately..reduces the story to the familiar Hollywood formula of boy-meets-girl. 1998    Cosmopolitan 		(U.K. ed.)	 Nov. 16  				This larky boy-meets-girl tale centres around the saucy activities of its heroine.  P3.    to send a boy to do a man's job and variants: to ask someone young, ill-equipped, or inexperienced to do difficult or complicated work. Usually in negative contexts, as  never send a boy to do a man's job. ΚΠ 1861    N.Y. Times 16 Oct. 1/1  				Gen. Hancock campaigned it through Mexico, and was too old a soldier to be caught sending a boy to do a man's work. 1899    Yale Law Rev. 9 76  				To expect such men to grapple successfully with the great problems of city government is absurd. We send a boy to do a man's job. 1911    Los Angeles Times 10 Aug.  ii. 4/2  				Never send a boy to do a man's duty. 1951    L. Lariar You Can't Catch Me ii. 18  				Do you send a boy out on a man's job? 1967    ‘E. McGirr’ Hearse with Horses vi. 142  				Piron thought he shouldn't have sent a boy to do a man's job. 2008    Sydney Morning Herald 		(Nexis)	 12 Mar. 21  				He has probably come to the conclusion one should never send a boy to do a man's job.  P4.    jobs for the boys: preferential treatment (as by the securing of appointments) for one's supporters or favourites; a situation characterized by such treatment. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > position or job > 			[noun]		 > for one's favourites jobs for the boys1910 1897    Daily Rev. 		(Decatur, Illinois)	 23 Dec. 4/2  				While it would be a good thing to confine the census to this mere enumeration of people, it is not at all likely it will be so confined. If the full line of work is not attempted, there will be no jobs for the boys in the bureau. The principal aim seems to be to secure the places.]			 1910    B. B. Lindsey  & H. J. O'Higgins Beast x. 181  				We should have used the surplus to provide ‘jobs for the boys’, as the other courts did. 1950    D. Christie  & C. Christie His Excellency i. i  				It's just a political racket—Jobs for the Boys. 1999    Independent 3 Feb.  i. 8/6  				Mr Ruffley said that from the answer, ‘it looks like jobs for the boys and cronyism’.  P5.    boy next door: a boy with whom one has or might have grown up as a neighbour, esp. a boy conventionally presented as a model for emulation by parents to their own son (now rare), or a young man such as might feature in a conventional romance, regarded as attractive because of his naturalness, lack of sophistication or artifice, etc. Chiefly with the or attributive. Cf. girl next door at girl n. Phrases 2d. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > love > love affair > 			[noun]		 > with reference to copy-book romance > young man in conventional romance boy next door1868 1868    R. H. Quick Ess. Educ. Reformers App. 317  				Perhaps we remember that in our nursery experiences, the good little boy next door was frequently referred to as presenting a striking contrast with our own unworthiness. 1886    Congregationalist 		(Boston, Mass.)	 20 May 7/1  				The boy next door stands for the associate who sits beside him in the class-room, who shares his luncheon at the noon recess, with whom he walks to and from school. 1923    M. F. Egan Confessions of Bk.-Lover i. 30  				The boy next door became a mirror of virtue: he was quoted to me as one whose pavement was a model to all the neighbours. 1939    Ladies' Home Jrnl. Apr. 12/3  				‘We—we became engaged down here.’ ‘Oh... So he was the boy next door.’ ‘What do you mean?’ He hesitated. ‘It's just part of a long conversation I had once with—with someone.’ 1955    T. Sterling Evil of Day viii. 80  				The boy-next-door parody was meant to amuse her. 1958    Photoplay Oct. 54/1  				His whole build-up is based on The Boy Next Door—the boy who's within reach of every girl fan. 2003    Time Out N.Y. 28 Aug. 142 		(advt.)	  				More about what I am looking for: The fairly intelligent, ambitious, confident..apple-pie-style boy-next-door type that I can take home to meet the parents. Compounds C1.    a.   Appositive (indicating gender, youthfulness, etc.).Some of the more established transparent compounds of this type are given separately at  Compounds 1b. ΚΠ 1570    T. Drant Two Serm. in  T. F. Dibdin Library Compan. 76  				This Romish Church defendeth..concubines, and boy-harlots. 1586    W. Warner Albions Eng.  ii. xi. 45  				Not so much as by the tongue the Boy-wench was bewraid. 1661    T. Fuller Andronicus  v. viii. 89  				Nuptial rites were suddenly dispatch't To a boy husband, a child wife was married, Our ages put together could not spell Thirty. 1681    J. Dryden in  C. Saunders Tamerlane sig. I2  				He's the first Boy-Poet of our Age. 1719    J. Richardson Two Disc.  i. 95  				She [sc. the Virgin Mary] is seated in Glory, encompass'd with Cherubims, Boy-Angels, and others as usually describ'd. 1762    J. Wesley Jrnl. 13 June 		(1827)	 III. 93  				Two or three boy-officers. 1864    M. J. Holmes Darkness & Daylight xix. 180  				I have often thought of this girl-wife and her handsome boy-husband, doubting whether I did right to marry them. 1866    W. D. Howells Venetian Life iv. 52  				An Albanian boy, who..curiously impressed me, as if he were the young of some Oriental animal—say a boy-elephant, or infant camel. 1879    R. Browning Ivan Ivanovitch in  Idyls I. 138  				Poor Stiopka..first Of my boy-brood. 1923    E. Blunden To Nature 46  				Old boy-heroes stood To catch its sparkling stonefish. 1942    R. St. John Land of Silent People vi. 135  				I had been over in France in the last war, a boy crusader. 1997    Ottawa Citizen 		(Nexis)	 13 July  m1  				Like his fellow boy-soldiers of the officer corps, John regularly received packages from home... By pooling their care packages the boy-officers were able to put together a memorable meal for John's birthday. 2002    Time Out N.Y. 26 Dec. 58/3  				Harry Potter is a contemporary boy-consumer who attends what looks like a classic English boarding school for the ancient art of magic.  b.     boy-actor  n. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > drama > actor > 			[noun]		 > boy-actor playboy1616 boy-actor1811 1811    G. Ensor On National Educ. 274  				The rage for such productions resembles the fury that seized all the idle some years ago to see the boy actor. 1861    A. K. H. Boyd Recreat. Country Parson 2nd Ser. 69  				The popularity of the boy-actor Betty. 1995    Extrapolation Spring 52  				A boy actor plays the role of the female Rosalind, who cross-dresses as the youth Ganymede.   boy alto  n. ΚΠ 1872    Musical Times & Singing Class Circular 15 639/1  				A part-song for male voices,..in which the boy altos sang with the first tenors with excellent effect. 1967    Times 28 June 10/6  				He became well known as a boy alto. 1996    R. Miller On Art of Singing  iii. v. 176  				He brings musicality to his ‘new’ instrument and applies some of the same basic techniques he used as a boy soprano or boy alto.   boy baby  n. ΘΚΠ the world > people > person > baby or infant > 			[noun]		 > baby boy boy baby1649 1649    C. Hoole Easie Entrance Lat. Tongue  ii. 262/2  				A boy-babie, Púpulus. 1842    Times 13 Jan. 6/2  				Queen Victoria has got a boy baby! 1991    J. Gomez Psychol. & Psychiatric Probl. Men 		(1993)	 iii. 12  				Boy babies are more often breast-fed and are weaned later than girls.   boy-bridegroom  n. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > marriage or wedlock > wedding or nuptials > people connected with wedding > 			[noun]		 > bridegroom > very young boy-bridegroom1807 1807    G. Crabbe Parish Reg.  ii, in  Poems 74  				The Boy-Bridegroom, shuffling in his Pace, Now hid awhile and then exposed his Face. 1907    M. Hume Court Philip IV i. 31  				The little bride, smiling and happy, and her pale boy bridegroom. 1988    Harvard Jrnl. Asiatic Stud. 48 102  				At the time of her arranged marriage to the then twelve-year-old boy-bridegroom.   boy child  n. ΘΚΠ the world > people > person > child > boy > 			[noun]		 knightc893 knapec1000 knaveOE knape childc1175 knave-childa1225 groom?c1225 knight-bairnc1275 pagec1300 mana1382 swainc1386 knave-bairna1400 little mana1425 man-childa1438 boy1440 little boya1475 lad1535 boykin1540 tomboya1556 urchin1556 loonc1560 kinchin-co(ve)1567 big boy1572 dandiprat1582 pricket1582 boy child1584 callant1597 suck-egg1609 nacketc1618 custrel1668 hospital-boy1677 whelp1710 laddie1721 charity-boy1723 pam-child1760 chappie1822 bo1825 boyo1835 wagling1837 shirttail boy1840 boysie1846 umfaan1852 nipper1859 yob1859 fellow-my-lad?1860 laddo1870 chokra1875 shegetz1885 spalpeen1891 spadger1899 bug1900 boychick1921 sonny boy1928 sonny1939 okie1943 lightie1946 outjie1961 oke1970 1584    T. Chaloner Shorte Disc. Nitre f. 4  				Dissolued in warmed water,..or else in a yonge boy childes vrine. 1850    Harper's Mag. Oct. 617/1  				The boy children shall be sent to school, where they may sit during three hours consecutively. 1928    C. McKay Home to Harlem xii. 161  				He had a mulatto wife and a brown boy-child in New York. 2007    Advertiser 		(Adelaide)	 		(Nexis)	 22 Sept. (Mag.)  w13  				The Chinese desire for a boy child is encapsulated in a Cambodian saying.   boy-god  n. ΚΠ 1602    F. Beaumont tr.  Ovid Salmacis & Hermaphroditus sig. C3v  				As the boy-god was keeping on his way. 1701    N. Rowe Ambitious Step-mother  iii. 42  				The Boy God Laughs at my Rage. 1816    Ld. Byron Siege of Corinth xxx. 49  				We kneeling see Her, and the boy-God on her knee. 1997    Classical Q. New Ser. 47 604  				Two lines of Propertius,..both of which describe those who might be stricken by the boy-god's bow.   boy-king  n. ΘΚΠ society > authority > rule or government > ruler or governor > sovereign ruler or monarch > king > 			[noun]		 > other types of king folk-kingOE boy-king1603 priest-king1606 shepherd king1744 king-emperor1789 1603    R. Knolles Gen. Hist. Turkes 748  				Most wicked men, who insolently triumphed ouer the boy king. 1798    H. Brand Huniades  i. i. 16  				This Boy King, the people will depose. 1907    Trans. Royal Hist. Soc. 1 260  				Eager..to enjoy the favour of the boy-king, and with his favour the privilege of governing the country. 2000    Church Times 11 Aug. 14/1  				It was during the boy-king's brief reign (1547–1553)..that Cranmer adopted a fully reformed view of the eucharist.   boy soprano  n. ΚΠ 1859    B. Taylor Trav. Greece & Russia xxx. 343  				The sweetness and purity of the boy sopranos swelled and sank like a chorus of angels. 1923    Musical Q. 9 107  				The first chorus (sopranos and boy sopranos, boy contraltos, and tenors) breathe softly. 2007    San Francisco Chron. 		(Nexis)	 11 June  d1  				The former boy soprano was making a living belting out commercial jingles.  C2.   General attributive. ΚΠ a1842    T. Arnold Let. in  Life & Corr. T. Arnold 		(1844)	 I. iii. 161  				I have had..one of those specimens of the evils of boy-nature which make me always unwilling to undergo the responsibility of advising any man to send his son to a public school. 1846    Renfrewshire Mag. Oct. 56  				Oliver had finished the second year of his apprenticeship; had cast off the boy clothes and assumed the toga. 1891    ‘M. Twain’ Lett. 		(1917)	 II. 541  				I confined myself to the boy-life out on the Mississippi. 1905    Westm. Gaz. 25 Nov. 5/1  				Of a sudden it struck into my boy-head like to grind a sack to save waste an' help my vather. 1976    F. Warner Killing Time  i. i. 5  				It was reported..as suicide, and they put it down to boy-trouble.  C3.   Objective.   boy-queller  n. ΘΚΠ the world > life > death > killing > killer for specific reason or type of person > 			[noun]		 > of boys boy-queller1609 1609    W. Shakespeare Troilus & Cressida  v. v. 47  				Come, come, thou boy-queller shew thy  face.       View more context for this quotation 1870    G. P. Quackenbos Spiers & Surenne's French & Eng. Pronouncing Dict. 64/1  				Boy-queller, tueur, meurtrier d'enfants (màles). 1906    Daily Chron. 14 Mar. 3/3  				The weapons which Mr. Bompas-Smith would put into the hands of every boy-queller are mostly old, tried ones. 1991    Shakespeare Q. 42 30  				The King, no boy-queller like Alexander, soon provides decorous yet companionable fellowship.  C4.     boy band  n. a young all-male pop group; spec. such a group whose music and image are designed to appeal primarily to a teenage audience. ΚΠ 1985    Guardian 7 Nov. 11/5  				Moody boy bands like The Waterboys and The Cult are making heavy records with deep lyrics for pimply adolescents with Camus peeping out of the jacket pocket. 1986    N.Y. Times 		(Nexis)	 16 Mar.  ii. 24/1  				A ‘girl group’ is still singular enough to require notice. No one reviewed U2 as the latest boy band from Ireland. 1993    Newsday 		(Nexis)	 10 Sept. 20  				The boy-band from Boston is getting long in the tooth for its prime audience—the under-16 set. 1995    Face Sept. 37/3  				Your average boy band generally can't wait to flee the potentially stigmatising orbit of the gay club scene. 2000    F. Walker in  J. Adams et al.  Girls' Night In 48  				Admittedly he'd tried to kiss me, but he'd also tried to kiss two members of a boy band. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > lack of understanding > foolishness, folly > childish folly, childishness > 			[adjective]		 > male knightlya1000 boyish?1545 boy-blinda1640 a1640    J. Fletcher  & P. Massinger Loves Pilgrimage  iii. ii, in  F. Beaumont  & J. Fletcher Comedies & Trag. 		(1647)	 sig. Bbbbbbbb4/2  				Put case he could be so boy-blind and foolish.   boy chap  n. English regional (south-western) a young, usually unmarried, male. ΚΠ 1872    T. Hardy Under Greenwood Tree I. iii. 116  				He'd starve to death for music's sake now, as much as when he was a boy-chap of fifteen. 1939    F. Thompson Lark Rise 48  				While the talking was going on, the few younger men, ‘boy-chaps’, as they were called until they were married, would not have taken a great part in it. 2004    Express & Echo 		(Exeter)	 		(Nexis)	 12 July 18  				In the fifties, when I was a ‘boy chap’, I used to work in Exeter market.   boy choir  n. a choir composed only of boys. ΚΠ 1854    G. Burges tr.  Plato Laws in  Wks. V.  ii. ix. 62  				The boy-choir of the Muses would most correctly enter the first... Let the second be the choir (of men). 1898    Musical Times & Singing Class Circular 39 548/2  				Boy choirs, mixed choirs, and quartet choirs. 1962    Morning Herald 		(Uniontown, Pa.)	 21 Dec. 11/4  				The boychoir will join the downstairs group for the singing of the antiphonal Mass. 2005    Sunday Express 		(Nexis)	 18 Dec. 42  				The trio of trebles..all sing in boy choirs.   boy-crazy adj. (esp. of a girl) extremely enthusiastic about boys (as potential romantic or sexual partners). ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > love > flirtation or coquetry > 			[adjective]		 > eager to associate with boys boy-crazy1911 1911    I. H. Gillmore Janey 44  				Mrs. Morgan says that Elsa is simply impossible this summer. She's just boy-crazy. 1923    Cosmopolitan Sept. 72/2  				Going boy-crazy at fifty. 2002    Time 15 Apr. 64/1  				In sitcomland, Kelly would be a boy-crazy princess.   boy-cut adj. 		(also boy's cut, boys' cut)	 originally U.S. (of women's clothing) designed or tailored in a masculine style; spec. (of briefs, bikini bottoms, etc.) cut straight and low across the upper thigh to resemble snugly-fitting shorts. ΚΠ 1956    N.Y. Times 31 Aug. 3/6 		(advt.)	  				Double-breasted boys' cut coat. 1973    Walla Walla 		(Washington)	 Union-Bull. 11 Apr. 2/6 		(advt.)	  				Girls' boy cut pants. 1976    Xenia 		(Ohio)	 Daily Gaz. 26 May (Advt. Suppl.)  				2 Pc. swimsuits... Solids and prints in bikini and boy cut leg styles. 2004    Daily Tel. 		(Nexis)	 27 July (Features section) 15  				There is still many a Betty Grable-style bikini with big, boy-cut bottoms.   boy-days  n. boyhood; time spent as a young boy. ΚΠ 1823    C. Lamb in  London Mag. Oct. 406/2  				Remember your boy-days. 1870    Chambers's Jrnl. 22 Oct. 674/1  				Replete with tender memories of the place where I had passed my boy-days. 1958    S. Selvon Turn again Tiger ii. 44  				What happen, you never had boy-days? You never play head and tail before? 1991    M. Matura Coup  i. i. 1  				We pay tribute to the man, Edward Francis Jones, Eddie to his friends, who, by all accounts, had quite normal boydays for a young man of his ilk.   boy-farm  n. now rare a school considered as a place to send unwanted boys (cf. farm n.2 6). ΘΚΠ society > education > place of education > school > 			[noun]		 > boys' school boy-farm1871 1871    Amer. Bibliopolist June (Monthly Gaz. of Lit.) 2/1  				Mr. Pullen considers all schools..to be mere starvation-traps and boy-farms, where the scholars ‘are at the mercy of a brute who hates them’. 1891    W. Morris News from Nowhere v. 30  				I had best say nothing about the boy-farms which I had been used to call schools. 1958    K. J. Fielding C. Dickens iii. 38  				He soon hit on the idea of writing about the Yorkshire schools, boyfarms where unwanted children were disposed of.   boy farmer  n. 		 (a) a boy engaged in farming;		 (b) a schoolmaster or headmaster (cf. boy-farm n.; rare). ΘΚΠ society > education > teaching > teacher > schoolteacher or schoolmaster > 			[noun]		 schoolmasterc1225 pedagoguea1387 pedanty1573 pedanta1586 dominiea1625 Khoja1625 schoolteachera1691 knight of the grammar1692 boy farmer1869 schoolkeeper1871 faki1872 professor1880 beak1888 schoolie1889 grade teacher1906 master teacher1931 chalk-and-talker1937 sir1955 teach1958 1869    E. Kellogg 		(title)	  				The boy farmers of Elm Island. 1871    H. W. Pullen Tom Pippin's Wedding i. 16  				It is..much more natural for the Boy to..say whether he is treated well or ill, than for the Boy-farmer to tell the plain truth, when less than half the truth would empty his school. 1901    Daily Chron. 16 Sept. 2/6  				The professional boy-farmers..are naturally trying to supply what is desired. 1940    Times 17 Jan. 4/7  				It is proposed that the boy farmers should have a three months' course of training on a piece of land of 100 acres outside Portsmouth. 2006    Lloyd's List 		(Nexis)	 24 Nov. 6  				A group entitled ‘on guard’ depicting a young boy farmer patriotically informing frontier guards on the work of saboteurs.   boy genius  n. 		 †(a) extremely promising intellectual or artistic ability which is at an early stage of development (obsolete rare);		 (b) a precociously clever or talented boy or young man. ΚΠ 1831    A. Cunningham in  Edinb. Lit. Jrnl. 5 Feb. 102/2  				Be gentle with your pen,..Be as sweet as summer's mouth,..On boy-genius gaining growth. 1846    G. Gilfillan Sketches of Mod. Lit. I. 311  				He [sc. Coleridge] is chargeable..in his earlier poems with the usual splendid sins of a boy-genius, imitation and turgidity of language. 1983    N.Y. Times 		(Nexis)	 26 July 		(Late City Final ed.)	  c11/1  				‘The Good Earth,’ Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's 1937 film, was dedicated to Irving Thalberg, the studio's boy genius. 2003    A. Konkle in  B. J. Mann Edward Albee iv. 49  				He was a boy genius (earned his Master's degree in his teens).   boy-girl  n. a person who combines some characteristics of both boys and girls. ΚΠ 1741    S. Richardson Lett. Particular Friends xc. 125  				A cock'd Hat, a lac'd Jacket, a Fop's Peruke, what strange Metamorphoses do they make! And then the Air assumed with them..makes, upon the whole, such a Boy-girl Figure, that [etc.]. 1833    B. W. Procter Ess. & Tales in Prose 107  				Bellario (a girl in disguise) addresses the King of Sicily... The young couple come in as masquers; and thus the boy-girl intercedes. 1850    New Monthly Mag. Feb. 274  				This is not a little sarcastic on the part of the boy-girl, Harry Wilmington. 1956    J. W. Aldridge In Search of Heresy ii. 39  				The ambivalent little boy-girls and girlboys of Capote and McCullers. 1997    J. Franceschina Homosexualities Eng. Theatre p. xi  				This androgyne..was able to cross-dress with impunity. Once on the stage, however,..the boy-girl challenges society.   boy-kind n. boys collectively or in general (chiefly as distinguished from mankind). ΘΚΠ the world > people > person > child > boy > 			[noun]		 > boys collectively blush1620 boy-kind1784 boyhood1886 1784    Christmas Tale 26  				Mankind and Boy-kind let this lesson reach! 1853    U.S. Rev. June 536  				My poetry, in particular, he held up to the derision of mankind, or rather boy-kind. 1876    M. Collins Blacksmith & Scholar I. vi. 157  				She held herself haughtily aloof from the mankind and boykind of New Bratton. 1999    Washington Post 		(Nexis)	 30 Dec.  c1  				The auto show is where boykind learns yet another thing or two from mankind—we come here to dream, son.   boy leg  n. and adj. originally U.S. 		 (a) adj. (of women's briefs, bikini bottoms, etc.) cut straight and low across the upper thigh to resemble snugly-fitting shorts; cf. boy-cut adj.;		 (b) n. a garment cut in this style; (in plural) the legs of such a garment. ΚΠ 1955    Oakland 		(Calif.)	 Tribune 12 June  a7/3 		(advt.)	  				Cotton swimsuits. Bloomer, boy leg styles. 1956    Lawton 		(Okla.)	 Constit. 28 May 3/4 		(advt.)	  				Swim suits..Bloomer leg suits. Boy legs. Half Skirts. 1997    Village Voice 		(N.Y.)	 15 July 14/3  				The old-fashioned one-piece bathing suits, with the square necks and the boy legs. 2003    S. Whiteley Too Much Too Young 		(2005)	 i. 22  				Dressed in a black polka-dot bra and white boy-leg knickers.   boy-lover  n. 		 (a) a lover of boys; a pederast;		 (b) a boy who is a lover. ΚΠ 1735    C. Place Reason Insufficient Guide 201  				Æschylus, and Sophocles also, had a Tragedy publickly acted upon the Stage, called the (Pederastes) Boy-Lover. 1829    W. G. Simms Vision of Cortes 78  				The Indian maid..stood beneath the old tree's shade. Surveying her boy-lover, as in view, He urged the arrowy prow of his canoe. 1882    Ballou's Monthly Mag. Sept. 278/2  				The merry blue eyes were unchanged; her ci-devant pupil and boy-lover stood before her. 1960    Musical Times Aug. 501/1  				A woman who could, if she chose, keep her boy-lover enslaved till death, but who has her great moment of renunciation. 1996    K. Maxwell Sexual Odyssey viii. 152  				Tibullus..wrote an elegy in which Priapus, as the god of boy-lovers, told his worshipers how to win the affection of boys who are beautiful but cold.   boy-man  n. a boy who behaves or is treated like an adult; (also) a full-grown man who retains some of the characteristics of boyhood. ΚΠ 1616    T. Dekker Artillery Garden sig. C2  				Yet all are loosers, and Victorious All, Euery Boy-man in this Infantery. 1763    J. Elphinston Education  i. 5  				The boy-man pities other boys at college! 1828    C. Lamb Char. Late Elia in  Elia 2nd Ser. 228  				He was too much of the boy-man. 1952    J. M. Brown As They Appear 33  				Although he had more than the average male's courage, he remained something of a boy-man until he died at the age of forty-four. 2005    Hotdog June 108/1  				He played..a boy-man who could not be counted on for anything—except, perhaps, to make the right expressions of love and honesty when they were most needed.   boy racer  n. British colloquial 		 (a) a youth or young man who enjoys driving very fast and aggressively, typically in a customized or high-performance car;		 (b) a car which appeals to such a person. ΚΠ 1968    Times 27 Mar. 17/3  				A lot of conversions have fallen down through total idiocy and the desire to satisfy boy racers. 1985    Times 		(Nexis)	 25 Jan. 25/6  				Some of the other changes..appear to be aimed at making the GTi more of a ‘boy racer’ than a magnificent performer hiding behind a rather discreet appearance. 2000    D. Adebayo My Once upon Time 		(2001)	 iii. 28  				Make a night of it as the boy racers had taken to doing on the SW3 bridge, whirling in their customised Escorts and fat-bumpered Fiestas.   boy-rid adj.				 [by analogy with bedrid adj.]			 rare overwhelmed or surfeited with boys. ΚΠ 1821    C. Lamb in  London Mag. May 495/2  				He is boy-rid, sick of perpetual boy. 1915    M. P. Willcocks Change viii. 89  				They were, for the moment, without an assistant master, so that all this week he had been ‘boy-rid’.   boy shorts n. originally U.S. (in early use) short trousers as a garment for women or girls; (now chiefly) women's briefs, bikini bottoms, etc., cut low and straight on the hip (cf. boy-cut adj.); also in singular. ΚΠ 1945    Waterloo 		(Iowa)	 Sunday Courier 1 July 11/5 		(advt.)	  				Boy shorts, pleated all around. Shorts and pedal pushers. 1974    R. Harris Decades II. iv. 85  				Almost all of them wore cotton dressmaker bathing suits, the kind with boy shorts that were supposed to make heavy thighs look thin. 1991    Boston Globe 		(Nexis)	 8 May (Living section) 73  				The boy short..is a strong summer trend in bathing suit bottoms. 2005    J. L. Anderson Peaches 144  				Leeda quickly stripped down too, to her silky hip-slung boy shorts. ΚΠ 1816    L. Hunt Story of Rimini  ii. 235  				Boy-storied trees, and love remember'd spots.   boy wonder  n. colloquial an exceptionally talented young man or boy, esp. one showing a great deal of promise; cf. wonder boy at wonder n. Compounds 1a. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > ability > 			[noun]		 > ability or talent > people having talent > person having talent > very gifted person prodigya1684 boy wonder1857 idiot savant1870 phenom1881 Wunderkind1891 superboy1907 Supergirl1912 savant1919 1857    Era 7 June 1/2 		(advt.)	  				The Royal Company of Liliputians [sic]... This unrivalled Troupe of Children... The Company consist of Master George Beckett, the Boy Wonder; [etc.]. 1898    Cent. Mag. Sept. 686/2  				At this time Reynolds was dead, Romney was failing, Lawrence was as yet little more than a boy wonder, so that for a short time Hoppner had matters quite his own way. 1940    Detective Comics Apr. No. 38 (cover)  				The sensational character-find of 1940—Robin, the Boy Wonder. 1986    N.Y. Times 31 Aug.  vi. 25/2  				All that might seem too downbeat for a man who still has the seductive charm and youthful vitality of an ageless boy wonder. 2001    Sunday Mirror 		(Electronic ed.)	 30 Dec.  				Jari Litmanen crossed, Heskey chested the ball down and there was the Boy Wonder to fire home. Derivatives  ˈboy-like adv. and adj. ΘΚΠ the world > people > person > child > boy > 			[adverb]		 boy-like1587 1587    A. Fleming et al.  Holinshed's Chron. 		(new ed.)	 III. 433/1  				The ringleader of this tumultuous rowt..hauing in his hand a drawne dagger, which he tossed from hand to hand, boy-like plaieng with it. 1591    A. Fraunce Countesse of Pembrokes Yuychurch Prol. sig. A3v  				Lord of loue's no boy, although that he seeme to be boylike. 1600    ‘Ignoto’ in  Englands Helicon sig. Z3v  				Thy boy-like brags I heare. 1753    J. Hill Observ. Greek & Rom. Classics iv. 236  				Boys, and boy-like critics may suppose this all the character of verse, but your Lordship will not judge so. 1852    H. B. Stowe Uncle Tom's Cabin I. ix. 132  				Two boys, who, boy like, had followed close on her heels. 1937    J. P. Marquand Late George Apley vi. 62  				They encountered a sudden thunder squall. Boylike, neither of them visualized the force of the gale..until it struck them suddenly with its full weight. 2006    J. Garbarino See Jane Hit viii. 203  				I could..use my body in a physical way that wasn't regarded as boylike or socially inappropriate. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2008; most recently modified version published online June 2022). † boyn.2 Scottish. Obsolete.   In plural. Shackles, fetters. ΘΚΠ society > authority > subjection > restraint or restraining > restraint depriving of liberty > binding or fettering > 			[noun]		 > bond(s) or fetter(s) or shackle(s) > for the feet or legs copsa700 fetterc800 gyvec1275 bolt1483 boysc1485 hose-ring?1515 hopshacklea1568 gin?1587 leg ring1606 hamper1613 shacklock1613 wife1616 pedicle1628 leg iron1779 wife1811 leg lock1815 ankle ring1823 anklet1835 hopple1888 Oregon boot1892 c1485						 (    G. Hay Bk. Law of Armys 		(2005)	 41  				The quhilk fand all thir maneris of jrnis cheynes fettris and boys to prisoun men withall. 1487						 (a1380)						    J. Barbour Bruce 		(St. John's Cambr.)	  x. 763  				Schir peris lumbard that ves tane..thai fand In presoune, fetterit with boyis, sittand. c1500    Acts Parl. Scotl. 		(1844)	 I. 8/2  				Gif he [sc. a thief] be put in boys or in fetteris. c1578    G. Maxwell et al.  Depositions in  W. Fraser Mem. Maxwells of Pollok 		(1863)	 I. 312  				Had certane barrellis,..certane sokis, ane pair of irne boyis. 1607    in  R. Pitcairn Criminal Trials Scotl. 		(1833)	 III. 3  				Mackoneill, because he had the boyes on his legges, wrested his kute in leaping. 1718    in  D. Yaxley Researcher's Gloss. Hist. Documents E. Anglia 		(2003)	 20  				Slade & a boy to ye Cart. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2008; most recently modified version published online June 2021). boyv. 1.   a.  transitive. To address (a person) as ‘boy’.Esp. with a man as object, with belittling implication. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > speech > conversation > addressing or speaking to > speak to or address			[verb (transitive)]		 > in a specific way thoua1425 thowt1440 yeet1440 ye1483 boy1573 uncle1597 goodfellow1628 thee1657 fellow1665 tutoyer1697 honour1726 pa1823 good man1846 old boy1867 tom1897 1573    G. Harvey Let.-bk. 		(1884)	 48  				If he boied me now..I hard him not. a1625    F. Beaumont  & J. Fletcher Knight of Malta  ii. iii, in  Comedies & Trag. 		(1647)	 sig. Kkkkk3/1  				Boy did he call me..I am tainted..Baffell'd, and boy'd. 1851    C. Dickens  & M. Lemon Mr. Nightingale's Diary 1  				Lithers. Here you are, my boy. Tip. (Much offended.) My boy! Who are you boying of! 1913    B. Tarkington Flirt 96  				‘Boy?’.. Do I hear aright? Sir, do you boy me?.. I am the stature of a man; had it not been for your razor I should wear the beard of a man; therefore I'll not be boyed. 1965    E. Mphahlele Down Second Ave 152  				I was ‘jimmed’ and ‘boy-ed’ and ‘john-ed’ by whites. 2002    J. Brewster Vicar of Afton vii. 63  				‘Easy, boy! I'll handle this! Just cool down!’ ‘Don't “boy” me!’  b.  transitive. To treat (a person) like a boy; to patronize. In early use also reflexive: to behave like a boy. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > pride > haughtiness or disdainfulness > treat haughtily or disdainfully			[verb (transitive)]		 condescendc1460 boya1625 patronize1820 schoolmarm1903 ritz1911 high-tone1917 upstage1921 high-hat1922 infantilize1931 a1625    J. Fletcher Island Princesse  ii. i, in  F. Beaumont  & J. Fletcher Comedies & Trag. 		(1647)	 104  				My countenance, it shames me, One scarce arrived, not harden'd yet, not Read in dangers and great deeds, sea-sick, not season'd—Oh I have boy'd my selfe. 1650    T. Vaughan Anima Magica 46  				I know the world will be ready to Boy me out of Countenance for this, because my yeares are few, and green. 2002    Chicago Rev. 		(Nexis)	 48 No. 4. 32  				It should shame me to be so boyed by a senior at Brentwood High—all my eighteenness, all my parochial school, falling out like so much stuffing. 2006    Times 		(Nexis)	 30 Jan. (Times2 section) 4  				If they [sc. young people] feel they have been disrespected they don't say ‘dissed’ any more but say that they have been ‘boyed’, as in looked down upon.  2.  transitive. Of a boy actor: to portray (a woman or her qualities) on the stage. In later use historical, frequently echoing quot. a1616. ΚΠ a1616    W. Shakespeare Antony & Cleopatra 		(1623)	  v. ii. 216  				I shall see Some squeaking Cleopatra Boy my  greatnesse.       View more context for this quotation 1894    N. Amer. Rev. Apr. 511  				To watch your young man, after his first teens, acting the woman, the squeaking Cleopatras boying womanishness, is to be disgusted. 1982    Theatre Jrnl. 34 452  				The look of the actor who boyed Cleopatra's greatness on the stage of the Globe can never be recovered. 1993    Stud. Eng. Lit. 1500–1900 33 311  				The very nature of theatrical representation defied ‘official’ positions on rank and degree, as common players personated princes, male actors ‘boyed’ females. 1998    C. R. Daileader Eroticism on Renaissance Stage i. 3  				While she lived, the Queen was protected from profaning mimicry, unlike her female subjects, who were ‘boyed’ on stage endlessly.  3.   a.  transitive. In passive. To have a male child or children. rare. ΚΠ a1635    R. Corbet Poems 		(1807)	 126  				Nor hast thou in his nuptiall armes enjoy'd Barren imbraces, but wert girl'd and boy'd. 1997    Santa Fe New Mexican 		(Nexis)	 6 June 23 		(poem)	  				Daughters are gifts worth the giving Why be ‘boyed’ when you can be ‘girled’?  b.  transitive. To provide with boys as personnel; to man with boys. Cf. man v. 1. rare. ΚΠ 1655    T. Fuller Hist. Univ. Cambr. vi. 96 in  Church-hist. Brit.  				The gates were shut, and partly Man'd, partly boy'd against him. 1897    N.Y. Times 23 May 18/2  				Is he confident..that he will be allowed his share in manning, or rather in ‘boying’, the municipal offices? 2001    Toronto Star 		(Nexis)	 27 Oct.  a1  				A dozen military blockages manned (boyed) by teenaged Russian soldiers in lonely sentry posts close to the border. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2008; most recently modified version published online December 2021). < | 
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