different between daff vs daffy
daff
English
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /dæf/
- Rhymes: -æf
Etymology 1
From Middle English daf, daffe (“fool, idiot”), from Old Norse daufr (“deaf, stupid”), from Proto-Germanic *daubaz (“deaf, stunned”), from Proto-Indo-European *d?ewb?- (“to whisk, whirl, smoke, be obscure”). Doublet of dowf and dof. Cognate with Swedish döv (“deaf”), Danish døv (“deaf, stupid”). More at deaf.
Noun
daff (plural daffs)
- A fool; an idiot; a blockhead.
Derived terms
- bedaff
- daffish
- daffock
- daffy
Etymology 2
From Middle English daffen (“to render foolish”), from daf, daffe (“fool, idiot”). See above.
Verb
daff (third-person singular simple present daffs, present participle daffing, simple past and past participle daffed)
- (intransitive) To be foolish; make sport; play; toy.
- (Can we find and add a quotation of Jamieson to this entry?)
- (Britain, dialect, obsolete) To daunt.
- (Can we find and add a quotation of Francis Grose to this entry?)
Derived terms
- daffing
- daffle
Etymology 3
Variant of doff.
Verb
daff (third-person singular simple present daffs, present participle daffing, simple past and past participle daffed)
- (transitive) To toss (aside); to dismiss.
- 1599, William Shakespeare, Much Ado About Nothing, Act 2 Scene 3
- DON PEDRO. I would she had bestowed this dotage on me; I would have daffed all other respects and made her half myself.
- 1948, CS Lewis, ‘Notes on the Way’:
- Such is the record of Scripture. Nor can you daff it aside by saying that local and temporary conditions condemned women to silence and private life.
- 1599, William Shakespeare, Much Ado About Nothing, Act 2 Scene 3
- (transitive) To turn (someone) aside; divert.
Etymology 4
From daffodil.
Noun
daff (plural daffs)
- (Britain, informal) Clipping of daffodil.
- Get your daffs here - £2 a bunch.
- 1934, Dorothy L. Sayers, The Nine Tailors
- You want a few more daffs on the decani side […]
Etymology 5
Noun
daff (plural daffs)
- Alternative form of daf (“type of drum”)
Anagrams
- aff'd
Yola
Verb
daff
- Alternative form of doff
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daffy
English
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /?dæfi/
- Rhymes: -æfi
Etymology 1
From daff +? -y.
Adjective
daffy (comparative daffier, superlative daffiest)
- (colloquial) Somewhat mad or eccentric.
- Synonyms: crazy, nutty, wacky
- 1909, Gene Stratton-Porter, A Girl of the Limberlost, ch. 1
- "You've gone so plum daffy you are forgetting your dinner," jeered her mother.
- 1922, F. Scott Fitzgerald, O Russet Witch!, ch. 4
- He was daffy about her and she could twist him around her little finger.
Etymology 2
Noun
daffy (plural daffies)
- (informal) A daffodil.
Etymology 3
An allusion to an old medicine known as Daffy's Elixir.
Noun
daffy (uncountable)
- (Britain, slang, dated) Gin.
- 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.
- 1954, Denzil Batchelor, Big Fight: The Story of World Championship Boxing (page 44)
References
- 1873, John Camden Hotten, The Slang Dictionary
daffy From the web:
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