c. 1200, "the young of a goat," from a Scandinavian source such as Old Norse kið "young goat," from Proto-Germanic *kidjom (cognates: Old High German kizzi, German kitze, Danish and Swedish kid). Extended meaning of "child" first recorded as slang 1590s, established in informal usage by 1840s. Applied to skillful young thieves and pugilists since at least 1812. Kid stuff "something easy" is from 1913 (The phrase was in use about that time in reference to vaudeville acts or advertisements featuring children, and to children-oriented features in newspapers). Kid glove "a glove made of kidskin leather" is from 1680s; sense of "characterized by wearing kid gloves," therefore "dainty, delicate" is from 1856.
kid (v.)
"tease playfully," 1839, earlier, in thieves' cant, "to coax, wheedle, hoax" (1811), probably from kid (n.), via notion of "treat as a child, make a kid of." Related: Kidded; kidding.
双语例句
1. He told us to get stuffed so we leaned on his kid.
他叫我们滚蛋,于是我们威胁他的孩子。
来自柯林斯例句
2. He beat up on my brother's kid one time.
他有一次殴打了我哥的孩子。
来自柯林斯例句
3. He's like some dreamy kid playing on his own.
他就像是个自娱自乐的爱幻想的孩子。
来自柯林斯例句
4. "Gimme a break, kid! You know how much those things cost?"