The word chick is a short form for chicken and its use in American slang to refer to a young woman is attributed to Sinclair Lewis' book Elmer Gantry (1927)
He had determined that marriage now would cramp his advancement in the church and that, anyway, he didn't want to marry this brainless little fluffy chick, who would be of no help in impressing rich parishioners. But that caution he had utterly forgotten in emotion, and her question was authentically a surprise, abominably a shock http://www.answers.com/main/ntquery?s=Lewis+Sinclair
"Chick" = "[young] woman/girl" is cited in the Historical Dictionary of American Slang as being in use from 1899. [Much older: "chick" = "child".] "Bird" = "young woman" is cited in HDAS from 1838 and in use from 1848 in the U.S.A.
The use of 'Jock' related to the modern use of the word for an athletic supporter and athletes started around the 1650's, as the word 'Jock' became associated with slang for 'penis'. Jock was previously used as a nickname for Jack, as Dick was a nickname for Richard, and both slowly evolved to the slang use of today, although at different times.
Slang changes with vocabulary and the times, much of it coming from the military of all countries
Calling an older woman a chick isn't derogatory, but it's not really very polite either. You'd want to be especially polite to your elders, and call her a woman or lady. If you have a casual relationship with an older woman, and can joke around easily, you might call her a chick to make her smile. The term "chick" is an older slang from the 1960's, so an older woman might remember being called that when she was young.
Sometimes it is. The word "cause" is also a complete word in itself, though, so you'll have to use the context of the sentence to determine if it's slang or not.
We use slang because it helps you to write notes in school, instead of writing the whole word. That is what my teacher said at school. Hope I answered your question well =]
The use of 'Jock' related to the modern use of the word for an athletic supporter and athletes started around the 1650's, as the word 'Jock' became associated with slang for 'penis'. Jock was previously used as a nickname for Jack, as Dick was a nickname for Richard, and both slowly evolved to the slang use of today, although at different times.
Dough is a slang word for money.
They tried to encourage better word choice, and reduce slang usage.
It's more of a Scottish slang word but the Irish do use it sometimes.
Some polite slang terms are gal or girl, bird or chick. An older term is "doll." In Australia, they use the term sheila.
This word is slang and not a word but an anagram.
Nightie is a slang word. It is the word that children use for nightgown.
I nailed that chick
slang
Yes and no. If you use the word split as in "I am going to split an orange," then no. That is an average word. If you use the word split as in "Let's split," then yes, as that is slang for "let's ditch this place" or "let's leave."
"Photobomb" is a slang word so don't use it in an exam.
Slang changes with vocabulary and the times, much of it coming from the military of all countries