daffy
See also: Daffy
English
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /ˈdæfi/
Audio (Southern England) (file) - Rhymes: -æfi
Adjective
daffy (comparative daffier, superlative daffiest)
- (colloquial) Somewhat mad or eccentric.
- 1898 September 30, Willa Cather, The Westbound Train:
- Now I'm hungry as a Rocky Mountain lion so come, let's go and get this poor, daffy, tealess widow and wine and dine with her and make it all up.
- 1909, Gene Stratton-Porter, chapter I, in A Girl of the Limberlost:
- "You've gone so plum daffy you are forgetting your dinner," jeered her mother.
- 1922, F. Scott Fitzgerald, chapter IV, in O Russet Witch!:
- He was daffy about her and she could twist him around her little finger.
Etymology 3
An allusion to an old medicine known as Daffy's Elixir.
Noun
daffy (uncountable)
- (UK, slang, dated) Gin.
- 1837-39, Charles Dickens, Oliver Twist
- “Do you give the children Daffy, Mrs. Mann?” inquired Bumble, following with his eyes the interesting process of mixing.
- 1954, Denzil Batchelor, Big Fight: The Story of World Championship Boxing, page 44:
- […] he failed repeatedly until he took over his famous house in Haymarket, where for many years, surrounded by such admirers as Byron, Tom Moore and Hazlitt, he smoked his yard of clay, drained his glass of 'daffy', and […]
- 1991, Julie Caille, Change of Heart, page 255:
- Within Castle Tavern, at Holborn, Charles Perth and Lord Lucan were drowning their disparate sorrows in a glass of daffy.
- 1837-39, Charles Dickens, Oliver Twist
References
- John Camden Hotten (1873) The Slang Dictionary
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.