T-Boy
English
    
    Etymology
    
From Cajun French petit (“little”) (dialectally pronounced /ti/) + English boy.
Proper noun
    
- (especially Louisiana) A nickname for a boy.
- 2016 March 23, Donna Hankins, Louisiana Cajun Girl, Balboa Press, →ISBN:- “We're just waiting on T Boy,” Bill said. We all knew that T Boy had the furthest to come to go frogging. He and his parents lived way past where the road ended. We all considered him and his family pure swamp people.
 
- 2020 November 10, George Graham, Fresh from Louisiana: The Soul of Cajun and Creole Home Cooking, Harvard Common Press, →ISBN, page 123:- Paul Berzas, alias T-Boy, has created quite a stir in boudin circles. This mild-mannered Cajun from Mamou, Louisiana, has consistently brought to market one of the most sought-after links in all of Louisiana.
 
- 2021 March 22, Sam Irwin, It Happens in Louisiana: Peculiar Tales, Traditions & Recipes from the Bayou, Arcadia Publishing, →ISBN:- MaMa: T-Boy, did you eat those beignets? T-Boy: Mais, no! Obviously, use of the word mais gives T'Boy's denial a lot more credibility.
 
 
See also
    
- t-boy (a trans man)
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