twinsie
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Noun
[edit]twinsie (plural twinsies)
- (childish) A twin.
- 2014, Marquita Valentine, Be Mine:
- “I’ve always considered Bella to be my twinsie, so if Ivan did kick Liam’s butt, then it would be for me, too. Because, twins.”
- 2017, Kathryn Ormsbee, Tash Hearts Tolstoy, Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, →ISBN:
- Shelly Reed, my twinsie and ginger soul sister, I still freak out about how Fate threw us together all those years ago, across the pond.
- 2018, Emma Renshaw, Vow of Retribution:
- My twinsie, Catherine, I can’t believe you’ve only been in my life for just a few months.
- 2020, J. Lorenzo Perillo, “Acknowledgments”, in Choreographing in Color: Filipinos, Hip-Hop, and the Cultural Politics of Euphemism, Oxford University Press, →ISBN, pages x–xi:
- Chelo Aestrid, my twinsie, has been one of the main reasons I can claim to know anything about Manila’s hip-hop dance community.
- 2020, Yodassa Williams, The Goddess Twins, SparkPress, →ISBN:
- “[…] We’re your cousins! Welcome to Londontown, twinsies,” the smaller sister says, her voice a higher pitched version of her sister’s.
- 2021, Mara Rutherford, Luminous, Inkyard Press, →ISBN:
- My twinsie, Sarah, deserves her own thank-you.
- 2022, Misha Bell, Sextuplet and the City, Mozaika Publications, →ISBN:
- “Who’s that?” “My twinsie’s new BFF.”