Meaning of Darling | Babel Free
ˈdɑːlɪŋDefinitions
- An English and Scottish surname transferred from the nickname, originally a nickname from darling.
- Often used as an affectionate term of address: a person who is very dear to one.
- A major river of Queensland and New South Wales, Australia, named for Governor Ralph Darling.
- A person who is kind, sweet, etc., and thus lovable; a pet, a sweetheart; also, an animal or thing which is cute and lovable.
- The Australian aboriginal language Baagandji, spoken along this river in New South Wales.
- A favourite.
- A small town in the Western Cape province, South Africa.
- The favourite child in a family.
- A census-designated place in Quitman County, Mississippi, United States.
-
A person (often a woman) or thing that is very popular with a certain group of people. broadly
-
A royal favourite, the intimate companion of a monarch or other royal personage, often delegated significant political power. obsolete
Equivalents
Беларуская
лю́бы
বাংলা
দিলরুবা
Cymraeg
cariad
Dansk
elskede
Suomi
armas
herttainen
kullanmuru
kullanmurunen
kullannuppu
kulta
kultanen
kultu
mettinen
mielitietty
rakas
raksu
suloinen
tuiretuinen
हिन्दी
आकर्षक
जानू
जिगर
पिया
प्रिय
प्रियतम
प्रियतमा
प्रिया
मनमाना
मुन्ना
मोहक
राँझा
साजन
सोणिया
हबीब
Íslenska
kær
ქართული
ახლობელი
Te Reo Māori
ate
Bahasa Melayu
sayang
Русский
возлюбленная
возлюбленный
голубушка
дорогая
дорогой
душенька
люби́мая
любимый
милая
милый
очарова́тельный
Slovenčina
zlatý
தமிழ்
அன்பு
IsiZulu
isingane
Examples
“Pass the wine, would you, darling?”
“[I]t is better to be / An old mans derling than a yong mans werling.”
“Feare ye not (ô darling) on thy ſide deſtinie runneth.”
“How ſhall I, void of tears, her death relate, / VVhile on her darling’s bed her mother ſate!”
“Sleep, sweet babe! my cares beguiling: / Mother sits beside thee smiling: / Sleep, my darling, tenderly!”
“My first, last love; the idol of my youth, / The darling of my manhood, and, alas! / Now the most blessed memory of mine age.”
“It is not worth the keeping: let it go: / But shall it? answer, darling, answer, no. / And trust me not at all or all in all.”
“'Twas not satiety bade me leave the dearling of my soul, ⁕ But that she sinned a mortal sin which clipt me in its clip: […]”
“Oh! Darling, please believe me / I'll never do you no harm”
“Oh, I could drink a case of you, darling / Still I'd be on my feet”
“"Whate'er you say, dearling." Despite her insults, Geirolf could see the love glowing in her face and he was encouraged.”
“"I dinna ken, dearling," he said huskily. "I wish … och, how I wish … I canna bear to think o' ye locked up in here."”
“Yeah, intelligent input darling / Why don't you just have another beer then?”
“The girl next door picks up all my shopping for me. She is such a darling.”
“When the Crocodile Queen came home, she found / That her eggs were broken and scattered around, / And that six young Princes, darlings all, / Were missing, for none of them answer'd her call.”
“What did they want, then, or in what manner did he fail in his duty towards those innocent darlings [his children]?”
“With every flock of sheep and girls are one or two enormous mastiffs, which could eat one, and do bark nastily. But when the children call them and introduce them to you formally, they stand to be patted, and eat out of your hand; they are great darlings, and necessary against bear and wolf.”
“And in ſo muche the more peril and haſard of the ſaid diſeaſes [“ambicion, auarice, riottous exceſſe, hatred, enuye, and ſuche others”] do the princes ſtand, as they are more then others made wantons ⁊ derelynges of fortune, and haue lybertie withoute checke or controllemente to fulfyll their owne ſenſuall luſtes and appetites.”
“[T]hat handkercher / Did an Egyptian to my mother giue, / […] ſhe told her vvhile ſhe kept it, / Tvvould make her amiable, and ſubdue my father / Intirely to her loue: […] [T]ake heed on't, / Make it [the handkerchief] a darling, like your pretious eye, / To looſe, or giue avvay, vvere ſuch perdition, / As nothing elſe could match.”
“Politics were never more corrupt and brutal; and Trade, that pride and darling of our ocean, that educator of nations, that benefactor in spite of itself, ends in shameful defaulting, bubble, and bankruptcy, all over the world.”
“Mary, the youngest daughter, was always her mother’s darling.”
“And tis a common obſervation in Familites, that the moſt diſcountenanc'd child oft makes better proof, then the dearling.”
“[…] John vvas the Darling, he had all the good Bits, vvas cramm'd vvith good Pullet, Chicken, Pig, Gooſe and Capon, vvhile Miſs had only a little Oatmeal and VVater, or a dry Cruſt vvithout Butter.”
“Exhausted fathers thinned the blood, / You curse the legacy of pain; / Darling of an infected brood, / You feel disaster climb the vein.”
“But Richmond, his grandfather's darling, after one thoughtful glance cast under his lashes at that uncompromising countenance, appeared to lose himself in his own reflections.”
“a media darling”
“a darling of the theatre”
“[…] Auguſtius Cæſar in his very entrance into affaires, vvhen he vvas a dearling of the Senate, yet in his haranges to the people, vvould ſvveare Ita parentis honores conſequi liceat, (vvhich vvas no leſſe then the Tyranny,) […]”
“The Generall of the Romanes in this action vvas Titus, ſonne to Veſpaſian the Emperour. A prince ſo good, that he vvas ſtyled the Darling of mankind for his ſvveet and loving nature; […]”
“Then the great knight, the darling of the court, / Loved of the loveliest, into that rude hall / Stept with all grace, […]”
“One of the darlings of the early vegetarian movement (particularly in its even sadder form, the cutlet), it was on the menu at John Harvey Kellogg's Battle Creek Sanitarium^([sic]), and has since become the default Sunday option for vegetarians – and a default source of derision for everyone else.”
“When kyng Henry perceiued, that the cõmons [commons] wer thus ſtomacked and bent, againſt the Quenes [Margaret of Anjou's] dearlynge William [de la Pole,] Duke of Suffolke, he plainly ſawe, that neither gloſyng woulde ſette, nor diſſimulacion coulde appeace, the continuall clamor of the importunate cõmons: Wherefore to begyn a ſhorte pacificacion in to long a broyle.”
“She [Caroline of Ansbach] immediately became the darling of the Princeſs Sophia [Charlotte of Hanover], vvho vvas acknovvledged in all the Courts of Europe the moſt accompliſhed vvoman of the age in vvhich ſhe lived, and vvho vvas not a little pleaſed vvith the converſation of one in vvhom ſhe ſavv ſo lively an image of her ovvn youth.”
“Richard and David Darling, founders of Codemasters, a multimillion-pound computer game company, dropped out of school aged 15 and 16 to write computer games […]”
CEFR level
A2
Elementary
This word is part of the CEFR A2 vocabulary — elementary level.
This word is part of the CEFR A2 vocabulary — elementary level.
See also
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