silly
Valid in Scrabble
- Scrabble points
- 8
- Words With Friends
- 9
- Letters
- 5
Definition of silly
21 senses · 3 parts of speech · etymology included
adj
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Laughable or amusing through foolishness or a foolish appearance.
“They were laughing at a silly joke.”
“silly grin”
“This is the silliest stuffe, that euer I heard.”
“I remember, before the Dwarf left the Queen, he followed us one day into thoſe gardens, and my Nurſe having ſet me down, he and I being cloſe together, near ſome Dwarf Apple trees, I muſt need ſhew my Wit, by a ſilly Alluſion between him and the Trees, which happens to hold in their Language as it doth in ours.”
“Well sir, I have a silly walk and I'd like to obtain a Government grant to help me develop it.”
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adj
-
Laughable or amusing through foolishness or a foolish appearance.
“They were laughing at a silly joke.”
“silly grin”
“This is the silliest stuffe, that euer I heard.”
“I remember, before the Dwarf left the Queen, he followed us one day into thoſe gardens, and my Nurſe having ſet me down, he and I being cloſe together, near ſome Dwarf Apple trees, I muſt need ſhew my Wit, by a ſilly Alluſion between him and the Trees, which happens to hold in their Language as it doth in ours.”
“Well sir, I have a silly walk and I'd like to obtain a Government grant to help me develop it.”
-
Laughable or amusing through foolishness or a foolish appearance.
“He cannot achieve celebrity by covering himself with diamonds... or by giving a silly price for a hack.”
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(Scotland, obsolete)Blessed
“The sylyman lay and herde, / And hys wyf answerd.”
“The King of Spaine is counted very ſtrong, and the Pope is counted very ſtrong, because they haue a ſtrong hand to perſecute the ſilly ones of leſus Chriſt.”
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(Scotland, obsolete)Blessed
“... thrie Saturdayes befor Lambas and thrie efter called the six silie Saturdayes.”
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(Northern-England, Scotland, rare)Pitiful, inspiring compassion, particularly
“The fire raging upon the silly Carcase.”
“Silly... in the same sense as E. poor is often used, denoting a state which excites compassion.”
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(Northern-England, Scotland, literary, rare)Pitiful, inspiring compassion
“There is no best in þe word, I wene... / That suffuris halfe so myche tene / As doth þe sylly wat.”
“In the silly lambis skin He crap als far as he micht win.”
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(Northern-England, Scotland, literary, rare)Pitiful, inspiring compassion
“scared silly”
“Wherfore Christe must soo moche the more instantelye be sought vpon, that he may vouchsafe to defende vs sylly wretches.”
“Ah Shepheard, pity my diſtreſſed plight, / (If as thou ſeem’ſt, thou art ſo meane a man) / And ſeeke not to inrich thy followers, / By lawleſſe rapine from a ſilly maide, […]”
“There remained fresh Examples of their Barbarism against weak Sea-men, and silly Fisher-men.”
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(Northern-England, Scotland, rare)Pitiful, inspiring compassion
“Ane sillie scheill vnder ane erdfast stane”
“[…]A pettigree / Of threescore and two yeares a sillie time, / To make prescription for a kingdomes worth.”
“It is naturally very poor, ‘silly’ land.”
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(Northern-England, Scotland, rare)Pitiful, inspiring compassion
“Here we see that a smal sillie Bird knoweth how to match with so great a Beast.”
“[Christ] leaueth neither Children nor kinsfolke behind him to vphold his sillie kingdome.”
“That'll never grow. It's ower silly.”
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(Northern-England, Scotland, rare)Pitiful, inspiring compassion
“To doe the thing we can / To please... / This silly sickly man.”
“Is there ony thing you would particularly fancy, as your health seems but silly?”
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(rare)Simple, plain
“Dauid had no more but a sylie slynge, and a few stones.”
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(obsolete, rare)Simple, plain
“The silly herdman all astonnied standes.”
“So luvaris lair no leid suld lak, A lord to lufe a silly lass.”
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(obsolete)Mentally simple, foolish
“From Hell (of which the silly people of the Country think the top of this hill to be the mouth).”
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Mentally simple, foolish
“silly mistake”
“Wee sillie soules, take the matter too too heauily.”
“‘Heaven help this silly fellow,’ murmured the perplexed locksmith.”
“Steve, don't be silly. I mean social intercourse.”
“The truth is that everyone is sillier than you could possibly imagine they'd be.”
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(Scotland)Mentally simple, foolish
“Fow ȝellow ȝellow wes hir heid bot scho of lufe wes sillie.”
“Davie's no just like other folk... but he's no sae silly as folk tak him for.”
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Mentally simple, foolish
“You say you were knocked silly—was that so?”
“Drinking myself silly...”
“Well, Judy, now that you've scared me silly, what's so important?”
“I can kick this stuff any time I like. I tell you what. Get this week over, we'll go to a health farm for ten days. No drugs. No drink. And shag ourselves silly. How about that?”
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Very close to the batsman, facing the bowler; closer than short.
“Carpenter now placed himself at silly-point for Grundy, who was playing very forward.”
adv
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(colloquial, regional)Sillily: in a silly manner.
“If you did but see how silly a Man fumbles for an Excuse, when he's a little asham'd of being in Love.”
noun
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(colloquial)A silly person.
“While they, poor sillies, bid good night, O' love an' bogles eerie.”
“"Oh, Bill. I can't - Oh, my dear, I've been hoping so much.... Oh, Bill..." said Josella. I had forgotten all about Susan until a voice came from above. "You are getting wet, you silly. Why don't you kiss her indoors?" it asked.”
-
(endearing)A term of address.
“‘Come on, silly,’ said Nannie.”
- (colloquial)A mistake.
Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.
Etymology
From Middle English seely, sēlī, from Old English sǣliġ, ġesǣliġ (“lucky, fortunate”), from Proto-West Germanic *sālīg, from *sāli; equivalent to seel (“happiness, bliss”) + -y. Doublet of Seelie. The semantic…
See full etymology Show less
From Middle English seely, sēlī, from Old English sǣliġ, ġesǣliġ (“lucky, fortunate”), from Proto-West Germanic *sālīg, from *sāli; equivalent to seel (“happiness, bliss”) + -y. Doublet of Seelie. The semantic evolution is “lucky” to “innocent” to “naive” to “foolish”. Compare the similar evolution of daft (originally meaning “accommodating”), and almost the reverse with nice (originally meaning “ignorant”).
Words you can make from silly
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