Noun
(US, Australia) A close friend; especially used as a form of address.
Okay, kiddo, I gotta run.
(US, Australia) A child.
Source: en.wiktionary.orgAnyone picture Bill ruffling his kids hair and saying “Don’t worry about it kiddo, everybody screws up?” Source: Internet
Epstein called Biden, who is 69, "kiddo," and dismissed the title of her dissertation, “Student Retention at the Community College Level: Meeting Students’ Needs,” as "unpromising." Source: Internet
While my kiddo still hates “the British,” he also knows about the British abolitionists who helped former slave, activist and author Frederick Douglass fight for an end to slavery in the 1800s. Source: Internet
True rocked a frilly peplum tank top, featuring dainty florals, from children’s clothing brand My Little Cozmo — you can buy the same top for the fashionable kiddo in your life for $54. Source: Internet
Then Jamie shares something old, new, borrowed and blue with his kiddo, they drink whisky, and he asks her if she’s ready to get hitched. Source: Internet
Each ball packs in seven layers of surprises, and your kiddo will be psyched to unravel the fun on Christmas morning. Source: Internet