flimsyとは 意味・読み方・使い方
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意味・対訳 薄っぺらな、もろい、薄弱な、浅薄な
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Wiktionary英語版での「flimsy」の意味 |
flimsy
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/10/12 19:25 UTC 版)
語源
The origin of the adjective is uncertain; it is possibly from flim(-flam) (“(noun) false information presented as true, misinformation, nonsense; poor attempt at deception, confidence trick, pretence; (adjective) frivolous, nonsensical; deceptive; fictitious”) or a metathesis of film (“thin layer of a substance; slender thread”) + -sy (suffix forming adjectives and nouns).
The noun and verb are derived from the noun. Noun sense 4 (“metal container”) refers to the fact that the containers often split along their seams and leaked.
発音
- (Received Pronunciation, General American) IPA: /ˈflɪmzi/
- 韻: -ɪmzi
- ハイフネーション: flim‧sy
形容詞
flimsy (comparative flimsier or more flimsy, superlative flimsiest or most flimsy)
- Likely to bend or break under pressure; easily damaged; frail, unsubstantial. [from 18th c.]
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1934, F[rancis] Scott Fitzgerald, Tender is the Night: A Romance, New York, N.Y.: Charles Scribner’s Sons, →OCLC; republished as chapter VII, in Malcolm Cowley, editor, Tender is the Night: A Romance [...] With the Author’s Final Revisions, New York, N.Y.: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1951, →OCLC, book IV (Escape: 1925–1929), page 223:
- Of clothing: very light and thin.
- Synonyms: diaphanous, filmy, gossamer, gossamer-thin, gossamery
- (figurative)
- Of an argument, explanation, etc.: ill-founded, unconvincing, weak; also, unimportant; paltry, trivial. [from 18th c.]
- Synonyms: feeble, unfounded, unsubstantiated
- Antonyms: well-founded, substantiated
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a flimsy excuse
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1765, William Blackstone, “Of the King, and His Title”, in Commentaries on the Laws of England, book I (Of the Rights of Persons), Oxford, Oxfordshire: […] Clarendon Press, →OCLC, page 194:
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And hovvever flimzey this title, and thoſe of VVilliam Rufus [William II of England] and Stephen of Blois [Stephen, King of England], may appear at this diſtance to us, after the lavv of deſcents hath novv been ſettled for ſo many centuries, they vvere ſufficient to puzzle the underſtandings of our brave, but unlettered, anceſtors.
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- Of a person: lacking depth of character or understanding; frivolous, superficial. [from 19th c.]
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1827, [Walter Scott], chapter XIII, in Chronicles of the Canongate; […], volume II (The Surgeon’s Daughter), Edinburgh: […] [Ballantyne and Co.] for Cadell and Co.; London: Simpkin and Marshall, →OCLC, page 305:
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"Yes, fell woman," answered Middlemas; "but was it I who encouraged the young tyrant's outrageous passion for a portrait, or who formed the abominable plan of placing the original within his power?" / "No—for to do so required brain and wit. But it was thine, flimsy villain, to execute the device which a bolder genius planned; it was thine to entice the woman to this foreign shore, under pretence of a love, which, on thy part, cold-blooded miscreant, never had existed."
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- (obsolete) Of a person, their physical makeup, or their health: delicate, frail. [18th c.]
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1742 January 18 (date written; Gregorian calendar), Horace Walpole, “Letter XVIII”, in Lord Dover [i.e., George Agar-Ellis, 1st Baron Dover], editor, Letters of Horace Walpole Earl of Orford, to Sir Horace Mann, British Envoy at the Court of Tuscany. […], volume I, London: Richard Bentley […], published 1833, →OCLC, page 72:
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- Of an argument, explanation, etc.: ill-founded, unconvincing, weak; also, unimportant; paltry, trivial. [from 18th c.]
名詞
flimsy (countable and uncountable, plural flimsies) (dated or historical)
- A thing which is ill-founded, unconvincing, or weak.
- (also attributive, uncountable) Thin typing paper used together with carbon paper in a typewriter to make multiple copies of a document; (countable) a sheet of such paper.
- (by extension) A document printed or typed on such paper.
- (naval slang, countable) A service certificate.
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1964 August 13, John [Armstrong] Spicer, Commissioner, “Officers Principally Concerned”, in Report of Royal Commissioner on Loss of H.M.A.S. “Voyager” (Papers Presented to Parliament; XIII), Canberra, A.C.T: [F]or the Government of the Commonwealth of Australia by A. J. Arthur, Commonwealth Government printer, →OCLC, page 3:
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1994, John Wells, “The Community of the Mid-Victorian Navy”, in The Royal Navy: An Illustrated Social History 1870–1982, Stroud, Gloucestershire; Dover, N.H.: Alan Sutton Publishing in association with the Royal Naval Museum, Portsmouth, →ISBN, page 7:
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- (slang, countable) A banknote; (uncountable) paper money.
- (newspapers, uncountable) The text to be set into pages of magazines, newspapers, etc.; copy.
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1859, George Augustus Sala, “Five o’Clock a.m.—The Publication of the ‘Times’ Newspaper”, in Twice Round the Clock; or The Hours of the Day and Night in London. […], London: Houlston and Wright, […], →OCLC, pages 31 and 34:
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[page 31] Sub-editors are now hard at work cutting down "flimsy," ramming sheets of "copy" on files, endlessly conferring with perspiring foremen. […] [page 34] The last report from the late debate in the Commons has come in; the last paragraph of interesting news, dropped into the box by a stealthy penny-a-liner, has been eliminated from a mass of flimsy on its probation, and for the most part rejected; […]
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- (naval slang, countable) A service certificate.
- (UK, military slang) A hexahedral metal container with a capacity of four imperial gallons (about 18 litres) used by the British Army during World War II to hold fuel.
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2008, Steven Pressfield, chapter 10, in Killing Rommel […], New York, N.Y.: Doubleday, →ISBN, page 98:
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But the Q[uartermaster] has ballsed-up T3 patrol's fuel ration; instead of jerry cans we get "flimsies," the notorious four-gallon containers made of metal so thin you can practically puncture it with a fingernail. Flimsies come two to a case, packed in cardboard. Of seventy-six that Collier's crew take down from the Mack, twenty-one are leaking at the seams; eleven have drained half to nil.
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派生語
動詞
flimsy (third-person singular simple present flimsies, present participle flimsying, simple past and past participle flimsied) (transitive)
- To make (something) likely to be easily damaged.
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1926 February 21, “Feminist furor: Three Kingdoms. By Storm Jameson. 365 pp. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. [book review]”, in The New York Times (Book review section), New York, N.Y.: The New York Times Company, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 8, column 5:
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Its method may be roughly said to be the invention, at all events for the main characters in their novels, of a psychology so tortuous and devious that its fantastic contours cannot be fitted into any single act or situation of or in life without an elaborate apparatus of dissertation. The artistic disadvantages of the method are many. One, and perhaps the chief, is a weakening—a "flimsying" of the structure because a proper proportion of the obvious, which is the thews and sinews of fiction, has, perforce, to be left out.
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- (dated or historical) To type or write (text) on a flimsy (“sheet of thin typing paper used together with carbon paper in a typewriter to make multiple copies of a document”) (noun sense 2).
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1895 November, Frank Banfield, “Interviewing in Practice”, in The National Review, volume XXVI, number 153, London: Edward Arnold, […], →OCLC, page 368:
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An interview is not a speech. […] If a man wants to publish an allocution of this kind, he should write it out and give it to me, or anyone else—a newsagency for example—and it will be "flimsied" to most of our English daily papers, whose conductors would, of course, use their own discretion as to how much or how little of it they would use. But in no sense of the word could such a performance be properly classified under the heading of the interview.
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1904 June 16, [Robert Wallace] Best, chairman and questioner; William Chessell, witness, “Select Committee. Privilege: Case of Senator Lt.-Col. [John Cash] Neild. Minutes of Evidence.”, in Journals of the Senate and Printed Papers having Special Reference to the Senate, volume I, [Canberra, A.C.T]: [F]or the Government of the Commonwealth of Australia by Rob[er]t S. Brain, Government Printer for the State of Victoria, published 1904, →OCLC, paragraphs 908–910, page 79:
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Did you, as a matter of fact, receive pages 55 and 56 at the same time?—I cannot say that I did. / But if you had received them?—I should have flimsied them with this. / As they are not flimsied, what do you say?—All I can presume is that they were not there. I should not have separated one paper from the other, and flimsied one and left the other.
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1907 June 22, “Notes of the week”, in The Saturday Review of Politics, Literature, Science, and Art, volume 103, number 2,695, London: […] Reginald Webster Page, […], →OCLC, page 765, column 2:
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[…] Mr. Spencer Hughes, the Liberal, is accusing the Independent Labour men of being "blacklegs." Some of them, it seems, have been doing the work of two or three journalists in the House, flimsying and syndicating London Letters and Labour articles and notes in a number of newspapers. Cannot they be peacefully persuaded to attend to their own work, and leave journalism to journalists?
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1923, Henry Lucy, chapter XIX, in The Diary of a Journalist: Fresh Extracts, volume III, London: John Murray, […], →OCLC, page 179:
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I [Phil May] lived down Brixton way and made a precarious living by flimsying news paragraphs and personally delivering copies at the newspaper offices. Sometimes they were used in full, occasionally they were ruthlessly cut down to a few lines; often they went direct to the waste-paper basket.
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- (figurative) To treat (someone or something) as paltry or unimportant; to demean, to underestimate.
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2008, Jill Stephenson, “Out of Order”, in One Life Passes for Another, [Bloomington, Ind.]: Xlibris, →ISBN, section 8, page 272:
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What she sacrificed in energy, emotion and integrity, diminished her rather than excelled. […] Teri suddenly saw herself flimsied by bargains she had negotiated too readily.
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参照
- ^ “flim-flam, n. and adj.”, in OED Online
, Oxford: Oxford University Press, December 2024; “flimflam, n.”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022. - ^ “flimsy, adj. and n.”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.
- ↑ Compare “flimsy, adj. and n.”, in OED Online
, Oxford: Oxford University Press, December 2024. - ^ “flimsy, v.”, in OED Online
, Oxford: Oxford University Press, December 2024.
「flimsy」を含む例文一覧
該当件数 : 40件
a small light flimsy boat発音を聞く 例文帳に追加
小さく軽くもろいボート - 日本語WordNet
Your argument is based on flimsy grounds.発音を聞く 例文帳に追加
君の論拠は虚弱だ - 斎藤和英大辞典
His argument is based on flimsy grounds.発音を聞く 例文帳に追加
議論の根拠が薄弱だ - 斎藤和英大辞典
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