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Buddy vs Boyfriend - What's the difference?

buddy | boyfriend | Related terms |

As nouns the difference between buddy and boyfriend

is that buddy is a friend or casual acquaintance while boyfriend is a male partner in a romantic relationship.

As a verb buddy

is to assign a buddy, or partner.

As a proper noun Buddy

is a male nickname.

buddy

English

Noun

(buddies)
  • A friend or casual acquaintance.
  • They have been buddies since they were in school.
  • A partner for a particular activity.
  • drinking buddies
  • An informal and friendly address to a stranger; a friendly placeholder name for a person one does not know.
  • Hey, buddy , I think you dropped this.

    Synonyms

    * (friend or acquaintance): mate * (address to a stranger): mate * See also

    Derived terms

    * buddy store * buddy system * buddy up * Buddyroll * fuck buddy

    Verb

  • To assign a buddy, or partner.
  • * {{quote-book, 2007, Philip Briggs & Danny Edmunds, Mozambique: The Bradt Travel Guide citation
  • , passage=If you are being formally buddied , have a good chat with your buddy and find out their interests -- these should more or less match your own.}} English terms of address

    boyfriend

    English

    Alternative forms

    * boy friend (dated)

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • A male partner in a romantic relationship.
  • * 2012 , (Justin Bieber), Boyfriend
  • If I was your boyfriend , I’d never let you go
    I can take you places you ain’t never been before.
  • A male friend.
  • Synonyms

    * (male friend) guyfriend (slang)

    Usage notes

    In contrast to its female equivalent, girlfriend, which is often used to describe a woman's close female friends, the term is not that often used in reference to non-romantic relationships. Boyfriend is a relatively modern term, and in the past has had implications of an illicit relationship (as sexual and romantic relationships outside marriage were generally frowned upon). It is now a generally accepted term and has no negative implications. Use of boyfriend generally implies that the male is a boy or a young man. An older man in a non-marital relationship and sometimes even a young man in a long-term relationship is more often described as a significant other or partner. Separating the word into its two components boy friend'' avoids the romantic implication nowadays, although ''boy friend'' used to mean the same as ''boyfriend does now. However, British and Australian men usually refer to a male friend as a mate. Similarly, Americans and Canadians use the term buddy.

    See also

    * * girlfriend * husband * lover * significant other ----