
“Dick” can mean two different things, and that’s why it sounds confusing:
- As a name – Dick is a traditional English nickname for Richard. In medieval times, people often made rhyming or shortened versions of names:
- Richard → Rick → Dick (similar to William → Will → Bill).
So, Dick was just a normal given name, especially common in the 18th–20th centuries.
- Richard → Rick → Dick (similar to William → Will → Bill).
- As slang for the penis – By the 19th century, dick had also become a slang word for “penis.” How this happened isn’t 100% clear, but linguists think it came from the fact that Dick was a very common man’s name, so it became a generic way to refer to a man (like “guy” or “fellow”), and then by extension, to male genitalia.
So, people didn’t originally name a person after the genital — it’s the other way around: the common male name “Dick” later got reused as slang for penis.
👉 Do you want me to also explain how other male names (like Johnson or Peter) also ended up being slang for genitals?