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dingy. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
dingy, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
dingy in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
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English
Etymology 1
From English dialectal (Kentish) dingy (“dirty”), of unknown origin, though probably from Middle English *dingy, dungy, from Old English *dyncgiġ (“covered with dung, dirty”), an umlaut form of duncge, dung (“dung”), equivalent to dung + -y, hence a doublet of dungy.[1]
Pronunciation
Adjective
dingy (comparative dingier, superlative dingiest)
- dark, dull
- Synonyms: drab, gloomy, dreary, dismal; see also Thesaurus:dim
- Antonym: bright
1960 December, “The Glasgow Suburban Electrification is opened”, in Trains Illustrated, page 713:The station has been refurbished both at ground level and below ground, where the wide, fluorescently lit platforms are an almost unrecognisable metamorphosis of the dingy, reeking Low Level of old.
- shabby, squalid, uncared-for
- Synonyms: grimy, dirty
- Antonym: pristine
1853 Christmas, [George Augustus Sala], “Over the Way’s Story”, in Charles Dickens, editor, Another Round of Stories by the Christmas Fire. Being the Extra Christmas Number of Household Words. , London, page 15, column 2:He led her through dingy wareroom after wareroom, counting-house after counting-house, where the clerks all were silent and subdued. He led her at last into a dingy sanctum, dimly lighted by one shaded lamp. In this safe there were piles of dingy papers and more dingy ledgers; […]
1951 October, R. S. McNaught, “Lines of Approach”, in Railway Magazine, page 704:At last the first glimpse from a bridge of an open-top red bus, and a noticeable darkening of the atmosphere from the smoke of London: then the increasingly dingy stations with double-barrel names, set amid what has always been to me the outstanding feature of the "Premier Line" approach to London—the positively marvellous display of crazy chimney-pots on the grey inner suburban houses. As many as twenty, all of varying style, standing together like ranks of jagged teeth, and providing a Dickensian back-cloth which no other route can boast.
2009, Sophie Kinsella, The Secret Dreamworld Of A Shopaholic: (Shopaholic Book 1):She's looking from Tarquin to Fenella with shining eyes, and I look at the picture interestedly over her shoulder. But to be honest, I can't say I'm impressed. For a start it's really dingy – all sludgy greens and brown
Derived terms
Translations
Etymology 2
Noun
dingy (plural dingies)
- Alternative form of dinghy
Verb
dingy (third-person singular simple present dingies, present participle dingying, simple past and past participle dingied)
- Alternative form of dinghy
References
Anagrams