teddy bear
See also: teddybear and Teddy Bear
English

A German teddy bear.
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Morris Michtom, the owner of a candy store in Brooklyn N.Y., who made the first “Teddy Bear” in the year 1902 in honor of then American President Theodore “Teddy” Roosevelt when he had heard that he had refused to shoot a bear cub on one of his hunting trips.
Noun
teddy bear (plural teddy bears)
- A plush toy in the shape of a bear.
- 1988, Michael Weikath, "Rise and Fall", Helloween, Keeper of the Seven Keys: Part II.
- The king of Los Angeles / Bought himself a teddy bear / And the queen became shameless / She did it with a chair
- 2021 September 22, Stephen Roberts, “The writings on the wall...”, in RAIL, number 940, page 74:
- The origin of Paddington (the bear, not the station) dates to 1956 when author Michael Bond (1926-2017) spotted a lonesome teddy bear on the shelf of a store near the station. It was Christmas Eve, so he bought the solitary bear for his wife.
- 1988, Michael Weikath, "Rise and Fall", Helloween, Keeper of the Seven Keys: Part II.
- A lovable, endearing, large, strong, hairy, or sweet man, particularly one who is gentle in spite of a burly or gruff appearance.
- 1999, Ebony - Vol. 54, No. 6, Big Men are Sexy Too - Apr 1999, page 73
- ...the sexy "teddy bear" frontman of the '80s rap group Heavy D and the Boyz.
- 2010, Abigail Reynolds, Man Who Loved Pride and Prejudice: A Modern Love Story with a Jane..., page 276:
- “So I'm sort of a big teddy bear, am I?” “A sexy teddy bear.” he kissed her neck.
- 1999, Ebony - Vol. 54, No. 6, Big Men are Sexy Too - Apr 1999, page 73
Derived terms
Translations
a stuffed toy bear
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lovable man
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