up the duff

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English

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Etymology

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(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.) Unknown; the OED states that the phrase was originally Australian. Possibly related to in the pudding club (duff is a type of pudding) and thus related to dough.

Pronunciation

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Prepositional phrase

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up the duff

  1. (UK, Ireland, Commonwealth, colloquial, slang) Pregnant.
    Synonyms: see Thesaurus:pregnant
    • 1987, David Leland, Wish You Were Here, spoken by Lynda Mansell (Emily Lloyd):
      Lynda up the duff—what odds do you put on that, eh, Mr Clever Dick, eh? That's shut his gob. That's put a crease in his brand-new suit.
    • 1994, The Daily Telegraph, quoted in The Oxford Dictionary of Idioms, page 88, 2nd edition, 2005:
      At 19, he was married (‘only because she was up the duff’ he explains gallantly).
    • 1998, Tracey Ullman, Tracey Takes On..., page 98:
      “Well, when he found out that my gran was up the duff, he went back to his native Norway (or it might have been Sweden) [] .”
    • 1998, Irvine Welsh, Filth, London: Jonathan Cape, →ISBN, page 191:
      It just means that some daft wee hairy that gets knocked up the duff has tae get oan the bus tae Carlisle tae get cleaned oot.
    • 2008, Sam de Brito, The Lost Boys, page 14:
      The great coalface of fuckwits; the fly-by-nighters, who do their five years in Bondi, befriend a Roosters player, get a good coke dealer, meet some tight westie bitch who′s moved here while she works a job in PR, they fall in love, she gets up the duff and then they have to buy a house in Condell Park and they′re gone [] .

Usage notes

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  • Possibly offensive to pregnant women. Usage may imply that the pregnancy is unplanned or unwanted.