different between tidge vs tidgy

tidge

English

Etymology

Possibly a blend of tidbit and smidge.

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -?d?

Noun

tidge (plural tidges)

  1. (informal) A very small amount.
    • 1978, Colin Tudge, "Cold turkey", New Scientist, 21-28 December 1978:
      Cucumber left for half a day, with red peppers and soy sauce and a tidge of sea salt (which tastes nice) comes through fierce and maritime as a Yangtse pirate.
    • 2007, Christian Moerk, Darling Jim, Henry Holt (2009), ?ISBN, page 39:
      Before I knew it he had taken my hand and squeezed it, just a tidge, like a gentleman would.
    • 2008, Connie Bailey, True Blue, Dreamspinner Press (2008), ?ISBN, page 178:
      “Sorry if I'm just a tidge miffed over the dirty trick he played on me.”
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:tidge.

Synonyms

  • See also Thesaurus:modicum.

Anagrams

  • idget

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tidgy

English

Adjective

tidgy (comparative more tidgy, superlative most tidgy)

  1. (Britain, dialect) Very small; teensy.
    • 2008, Jim Cartwright, Supermarket supermodel
      I was going to let him have one in the tidgy triangle below the throat like Suze taught me, but everything stopped at the sound of Paulie retching.

tidgy From the web:

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