hi,
Are these words synonyms? In what context can I use the words lad & lass?
eg The boy/girl is running in the street.
Can I replace the words lad & lass with boy & girl?
Madox
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hi,
Are these words synonyms? In what context can I use the words lad & lass?
eg The boy/girl is running in the street.
Can I replace the words lad & lass with boy & girl?
Madox
Both lad and lass have rather fallen into disuse, apart from regional dialect. It will look odd to use them now.
:up: But a few idioms persist. Example: 'a bit of a lad' =sexually precocious young man.
b
hi,
I have found the idiom ''a Jack the Lad" = a young man who is very confident in a noisy way, and enjoys going out with male friends, drinking alcohol and trying to attract women.
eg. He used to be a bit of a Jack the Lad - I never thought he'd settle down and get married.
Madox
:up: That phrase is very like 'a bit of a lad'. In fact I've heard them mixed together - 'a bit of a Jack the Lad'. But the common noun 'lad' is, as Anglika said, largely out of use. Since reading her reply, though, I have remembered a couple of more common uses, always in the plural:
'He's out drinking with the lads, as usual on a Friday' [=an unspecified, but habitual, group of men friends]
I thought the lads played well this afternoon. [=a team of male sportsmen. Strangely if they're women they're not 'lasses'.]
'Come on lads - we can do better than this.' [=a team (again), but used as a form of address to all the other team members]
b