KID


Meaning of KID in English

I. ˈkid noun

( -s )

Etymology: Middle English kide, of Scandinavian origin; akin to Old Norse kith kid, Old Swedish kidh; akin to Old High German kizzī kid; probably, like Middle Irish cit sheep, Albanian qith young male goat, from a cry to goats and sheep to return to the fold

1.

a.

(1) : a young goat usually under one year old

(2) : a young individual of various related animals (as many antelopes and some deer)

b. : a young individual of various other animals

a sea-otter kid

2.

a. : the flesh, fur, or skin of a kid

b. : something made of kid: as

(1) : kidskin

(2) : kid leather

(3) : kid glove

3. : child , youngster

took the kids to the playground

a kid of eighteen — Dan Cushman

grade-school kids

4. slang : a young person marked by proficiency or expertness

quite some kid when it comes to staying in the public eye

II. intransitive verb

( kidded ; kidded ; kidding ; kids )

Etymology: Middle English kidden, from kide, n.

: to bring forth young — used of a goat or an antelope

III. adjective

Etymology: kid (I)

1. : of, relating to, or made of kid

2. : younger — used in the phrases kid brother and kid sister

IV. verb

( kidded ; kidded ; kidding ; kids )

Etymology: probably from kid (I)

transitive verb

1. : deceive , fool

2. : to make fun of usually good-humoredly and often by innocent deception

used to kid him then about his intellectual face — G.W.Brace

a medicine-show barker kidding the crowd

any nation that could kid its own foibles was … new and pleasant — Time

kidded him into thinking the police were inquiring about him

intransitive verb

1. : to make fun of someone or something

2.

a. : joke

b. : to indulge in good-humored fooling or horseplay — often used with around

• kid·der -də(r) noun -s

V. noun

( -s )

Etymology: Middle English kidde, kid

dialect England : a bundle of heath and twigs : fagot

VI. transitive verb

( kidded ; kidded ; kidding ; kids )

: to bind (fagots) in bundles

VII. intransitive verb

( kidded ; kidded ; kidding ; kids )

Etymology: probably alteration of earlier cod, from cod (I)

dialect England : to form pods — used of a legume

VIII. noun

( -s )

Etymology: probably alteration of cod (I)

dialect England : the seed pod of a legume

IX. noun

( -s )

Etymology: probably alteration of kit (I)

: a small wooden tub ; especially : a sailor's mess tub

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.