English

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Etymology

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kike +‎ dyke. Chosen for the rhyme. First use appears c. 1981.

Noun

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kike dyke (plural kike dykes)

  1. (slang, derogatory, ethnic slur, offensive, somewhat humorous) A Jewish lesbian.
    • 1981, Gale Research Company (publisher), Contemporary Authors - A Bio-bibliographical Guide to Current Writers in Fiction, General Nonfiction, Poetry, Journalism, Drama, Motion Pictures, Television, and Other Fields · Volume 12, page 137:
      Kike Dyke," as she sometimes referred to herself), Bowles had many affairs while married to the noted composer/novelist
    • 1982, Rockford College. Institute, Rockford Institute (contributors), Chronicles of Culture - Volume 6, Issue 3, page 8:
      She apparently reveled in the degradation afforded by her lesbian affairs, and on occasion she referred to herself as "Crippie, the Kike Dyke."
    • 1991, David Poyer, The Gulf, page 40:
      "That kike dyke. Who'd she have to blow to get that job?" said one.
    • 2009, Jeff Sharlet, Peter Manseau (editors), Believer, Beware - First-person Dispatches from the Margins of Faith, page 61:
      I was a pale, chubby, half-Jew kid from half a family, son of the "kike-dyke" of Washington Road, as Bob Hunt christened my mother, with double inaccuracy.