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nifle. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
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English
Etymology
From Middle English nifle, possibly from Anglo-Norman. Compare Scots niffle (“to trifle”).
(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium. Particularly: “OED gives various theories, none very convincing”)
Noun
nifle (plural nifles)
- (obsolete) A trifle; something small and insignificant.
1599, Richard Hakluyt, The Principal Nauigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoueries of the English Nation, , 2nd edition, London: George Bishop, Ralph Newberie, and Robert Barker, →OCLC, page 193:THE great Galees of Venice and Florence
Be well laden with things of complacence,
All spicery and of grossers ware:
With sweete wines all maner of chaffare,
Apes, and Japes, and marmusets tayled,
Nifles and trifles that little have avayled:
And things with which they fetely blere our eye:
With things not induring that we bye.
1607, Thomas Walkington, The optick glasse of humors. Or The touchstone of a golden temperature, , page 83:[…] but if they be greeued, let their toad-swolne galls burst in sunder for me, with puffing choler: let them turne the buckle of their dudgeon anger behinde, lest the toung of it catch their owne dottril skins, I waigh them not a nifle.
1610, William Camden, “Montgomery-shire”, in Philémon Holland, transl., Britain, or A Chorographicall Description of the Most Flourishing Kingdomes, England, Scotland, and Ireland, , London: Georgii Bishop & Ioannis Norton, →OCLC, pages 662-663:If I should say, that either Duke Medus, or Prince Olanus built this Mediolanum of ours, and those Cities of the same name in Gaule, or that whiles they were a building Sus mediatim Lanata, that is, That a Sow halfe fleeced with wooll, was digged up, might I not be thought (thinke you) to catch at Clouds, and fish for Nifles?
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