Karin
What is "diddo"? I agree?
Jan 1, 2009 1:13 PM
Answers · 5
2
I think you mean "ditto", which sounds like "diddo" when spoken in an American accent. In a column of figures you can write a ditto mark to say that a figure is the same as the one above. So, by analogy, if somebody makes a remark, and someone else replies "ditto", they mean "same here" or "that's exactly what I would say".
January 1, 2009
1
Does anybody remember when teachers gave you handouts that were printed in purple ink (or am I that old)? Those were from ditto machines. Thus, "ditto" means "copy." In slang, "ditto" means, as everyone has been saying, "I agree."
January 2, 2009
But then again it would be a whole nother thing if the 2nd 'd' was an L.
January 2, 2009
Ditto. lol
January 1, 2009
I do not know, I am confused about such words. They like to mix up and then make such inunderstandable words. Why do we need such complicated language? I have no answer.
January 1, 2009
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