Dude! Where does the word dude come from?
with thanks to Taking English One Thumb at a Time ( dūd, dyūd ) n. Informal . An Easterner or city person who vacations on a ranch in the West. Informal . A man who is very fancy or sharp in dress and demeanor. Slang . A man; a fellow. dudes Persons of either sex. tr.v. , dud·ed , dud·ing , dudes . Slang . To dress elaborately or flamboyantly: got all duded up for the show. interj. Slang Used to express approval, satisfaction, or congratulations. Source The origins of the word dude are disputed but certainly predate Dude, Where’s my Car? (2000). According to the American Heritage Dictionary: Originally it was applied to fancy-dressed city folk who went out west on vacation. In this usage it first appears in the 1870s. A New York newspaper declared one Evan Berry (left) the ‘King of the Dudes’ in 1888. 'Dude' makes an appearance in Mark Twain’s A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court (1889). The word also pops-up in the letters of an