baby mama
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
Formed in African-American Vernacular English, attested since the 1980s[1] and popularized in the 2000s.[2][3] Possibly from or influenced by same term in Jamaican English, from Jamaican Creole baby-mother (“pregnant woman”) (1966),[3] alternatively due simply to grammatical similarities between AAVE and Jamaican Creole.[2]
Pronunciation
Audio (AU) (file)
Noun
baby mama (plural baby mamas)
- (US, slang) Mother of child in common, particularly unmarried.
- 2008, Ebony Vol. 63, No. 8, Sidestepping Baby Mama Drama - Jun 2008, page 154
- For men who must deal with these situations and others like them, the result is what has now been deemed as "baby-mama drama."
- She's not his girlfriend now, but she's one of his baby mamas.
- 2008, Ebony Vol. 63, No. 8, Sidestepping Baby Mama Drama - Jun 2008, page 154
Usage notes
Contentious usage – sometimes used neutrally as a casual term, regardless of marriage status, particularly in the tabloid press,[3] or as a term of endearment. Often considered pejorative, particularly if applied to unmarried black parents – if used by one parent of the other, can imply “child in common but no meaningful relationship”, while if used by outsiders, can imply disapproval of children born out of wedlock; see citations.[4] More formal variants include “baby’s mama” and “baby’s mother”; in formal usage “mother of one’s child” is preferred. Similar considerations apply to baby daddy.
Quotations
- For quotations using this term, see Citations:baby mama.
References
- “baby-mama, n.” under “baby, n. and adj.”, in OED Online
, Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, September 2021.
- John McWhorter (December 10, 2008), “What did Joe Louis have to tell us about Tina Fey?”, in Language Log
- Julia Turner (May 7, 2006), “Where Do "Baby-Daddies" Come From? The origins of the phrase.”, in Slate
- Tobin Harshaw (June 12, 2008), “Was It a Slur?”, in New York Times