(slang, countable) A paedophile.
"When I went round he was like ... trying to tell me about the paedo and how he was a great man, like it wasn't national news that the fucker was a paedo."
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UK and Irish slang — Cockney, Scouse, Geordie, Yorkshire, Glaswegian, Brummie, Welsh, West Country, plus Irish English. Centuries of regional dialects feeding into modern British and Irish street talk.
See all British & Irish slang slang on Slangora.
Browse all slang words starting with P.
In truth, the world is getting along just fine without the old paedo...
(British, slang, uncountable) Paedophilia.
"When I went round he was like ... trying to tell me about the paedo and how he was a great man, like it wasn't national news that the fucker was a paedo."
“#10000 #Paedo #Clerics welcome i guess”
“Some great parents there. Let's take our children to WH to meet king paedo and his paedo party.”
“In truth, the world is getting along just fine without the old paedo...”
“Just seeing Trump that close to a child makes me uncomfortable, like watching old footage of Jimmy Savile. Fucking Paedo #Trump”
“Get them away from the Paedo President!!!”
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(British, slang) Paedophile, paedophiliac.
"paedo" means: Paedophile, paedophiliac.. This is informal slang, common in casual speech, texting and social media, but not appropriate for school work, applications or professional settings. There is no real cause for concern in itself; it is everyday peer vocabulary. If your child uses it, a light comment about audience and register is usually enough — no need to escalate. Context, more than the word, tells you whether to follow up.
"paedo" means: Paedophile, paedophiliac.. Register: informal slang, fine in casual conversation, texting and social media but not in academic essays, business writing or formal speech. Note the regional or dialect label (British) — usage may sound odd outside that variety. A common non-native mistake is to use the word in the wrong register, or to assume one fixed meaning when it is actually polysemous; always check the surrounding register and the audience before producing it yourself. In formal writing, prefer a neutral synonym or a short descriptive phrase, and use this word only when you have heard or read it being used naturally in a comparable context.
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