paddlin’
In Appalachian and Southern speech, a "paddlin’" means a spanking or whipping with a paddle, especially as school discipline. It’s a folksy word for corporal punishment, remembered by many who grew up in rural schools.
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Pronunciation
Meaning & Usage
- A spanking with a paddle (noun)
- A punishment or whipping in general (figurative)
Origin
From "paddle," the wooden board used for corporal punishment in schools. The verb "to paddle" someone meant to spank them; "paddlin’" was the noun form for the punishment itself. Widely used in 20th-century American schools, especially in the South and Appalachia.
Notes
Still remembered vividly in Southern and Appalachian storytelling. Less used outside the region, where "spanking" or "swats" were more common. Today it’s mostly a nostalgic or joking word, since paddling in schools has nearly disappeared.
Say It Like a Southerner
Said plain: "pad-lin." The final "g" is dropped: "paddlin’."