Daddy-O
A hip, affectionate way to address a man — the beatnik equivalent of 'man' or 'dude.'
Definitions
A generic stand-in for 'guy' or 'fellow' when the speaker doesn't know the name.
A friendly term of address for a man, especially one seen as cool, in-the-know, or part of the scene.
Used mockingly or to flag someone trying too hard to sound hip — the word curdled into parody by the late '50s.
Daddy-O In A Sentence
Origin & Usage
Rooted in 1940s Black American jazz musicians' slang, where 'daddy' was a term of respect among players; the '-o' suffix was a hip embellishment. It spread through the 1950s Beat scene and was caricatured by mainstream media as shorthand for beatnik talk.
People Also Ask
What does daddy-o mean in slang?
It's a hip, friendly way to address a man — close to 'man,' 'dude,' or 'buddy.' It came out of jazz culture and became a signature beatnik term.
Where did daddy-o come from?
From 1940s Black jazz musicians, who used 'daddy' as a term of respect; beatniks adopted it in the 1950s and the suffix '-o' added a stylish flourish.
Is daddy-o still used today?
Mostly ironically or as period flavor. It instantly signals '1950s beatnik' and is rarely used straight anymore.
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