出典:Wiktionary
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/09/01 23:36 UTC 版)
Noun sense 1 is possibly from nod (“to incline the head up and down; to gradually fall asleep”) + -y (suffix forming diminutive nouns or familiar names); or a shortening of noddypoll, an obsolete alteration of hoddypoll (“fumbling, inept person”).
The origin of noun sense 2 is uncertain; it is possibly derived from sense 1. Compare muggins (“fool, idiot; card game based on building in suits or matching exposed cards, the object being to get rid of one’s cards”).
The origin of the adjective is uncertain; it is possibly also from nod (verb) + -y (suffix meaning ‘of or relating to’ forming adjectives).
The verb is derived from noun sense 1.
noddy (countable and uncountable, plural noddies)
noddy (comparative more noddy, superlative most noddy)
noddy (third-person singular simple present noddies, present participle noddying, simple past and past participle noddied)
From nod (“to incline the head up and down; to gradually fall asleep”) + -y (suffix forming diminutive nouns or familiar names; and meaning ‘of or relating to’ forming adjectives).
Noun sense 1 (“tern of the genus Anous”) possibly refers to the nodding behaviour of the birds during courtship. Sense 3 (“fellatio”) refers to the nodding motion of the head of a person performing the sex act. Sense 5 (“cutaway scene of a television interviewer nodding”) was coined by the English cultural theorist and media scholar John Fiske (1939–2021) in 1987. Sense 6.2 (“state of being asleep”) is possibly a pun on etymology 1, sense 2.2.1 (“sexual intercourse”).
noddy (plural noddies)
noddy (comparative more noddy, superlative most noddy)
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