Friday, May 1, 2015

usage - Proper meaning of the slang "Baby"




  • Let him do it because it's his baby.


  • Don't push this job on me because it's your baby, not mine.



  • This classic show car is his baby.


  • Hey baby, how are you doing today?




I understand that the speaker used the word baby to describe work in the first and second examples. The 3rd example is confusing me. How can a car be one's work? Please help improve my understanding.



I know the slang word baby means "a woman who is young", as in the last example, someone is talking to a woman/girl.


Answer



You've slightly misinterpreted the word baby in your first three examples. It means something in which one has invested time, interest, and emotion and for which one has a proprietary feeling. Speaking hyperbolically, it's as though the object of interest is like one's own child.




I thought I should add an example of the usage that didn't involve work- or job-related situations. This turned out not to be as easy as I thought. There's even a canonical political cartoon, showing Hoover turning over the problems of the Depression to Roosevelt in 1933, captioned "It's his 'baby' now":



enter image description here



But I finally found a story about a man who as a hobby, salvaged his car that had been in an accident, replacing the metal body with one made entirely of wood. From that story:




So, he started salvage [sic] spruce wood from construction sites, adding up
bit-by-bit to his truck every evening after work for about nine
months. So you can say it’s his baby now.





A labor of love, with a play on the nine-month "gestation" period for the "baby."


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