English

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Etymology

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First use appears c. 1938. See cite below.

Adjective

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cuddly-wuddly (not comparable)

  1. (slang, childish) Cute, cuddly or adorable.
    • 1938, Barbara B. Stevens, The Strongest Son, page 143:
      'I'm not tired. I never want to go to bed again. Yes, I'm comfy, cuddly-wuddly.
    • 1969, Robert W. Krepps, Fancy, A Novel, page 89:
      not books full of itsy-bitsy cuddly-wuddly fat-headed peeps and little vapid pink pigs in frock coats and all that blah, but good stuff like Oz, and Grimm, and Kipling, and Poe and Little Women.”
    • 1989, George Shannon, Arnold Lobel, page 53:
      are such cuddly-wuddly butterballs that I wish the hunting season were on ... The bears' most prominent feature are big black rubberball noses, which I'd like to punch, they're so cute.