duff
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /dʌf/
- Rhymes: -ʌf
Etymology 1
Representing a northern pronunciation of dough.
Noun
duff (plural duffs)
- (dialectal) Dough.
- A stiff flour pudding, often with dried fruit, boiled in a cloth bag, or steamed.
- 1901, Henry Lawson, short story The Ghosts of Many Christmases, published in Children of the Bush :
- The storekeeper had sent them an unbroken case of canned plum pudding, and probably by this time he was wondering what had become of that blanky case of duff.
- 1901, Henry Lawson, short story The Ghosts of Many Christmases, published in Children of the Bush :
Derived terms
Etymology 2
Origin uncertain; probably related to Proto-Indo-European *dʰewbʰ- (“to whisk, smoke, darken, obscure”).
Noun
duff (countable and uncountable, plural duffs)
- (Scotland, US) Decaying vegetable matter on the forest floor.
- 1999, George RR Martin, A Clash of Kings, Bantam 2011, p. 366:
- Out under the trees, some rangers had found enough duff and dry wood to start a fire beneath a slanting ridge of slate.
- 2006, Kathy Morey, Mike White, Stacey Corless, Sierra South: Backcountry Trips in Californias Sierra Nevada (page 250)
- The underfooting is mostly duff and sand, through alternating forest and meadow.
- 1999, George RR Martin, A Clash of Kings, Bantam 2011, p. 366:
- Coal dust.
- (slang) The bits left in the bottom of the bag after the booty has been consumed, like crumbs.
- Something spurious or fake; a counterfeit, a worthless thing.
- (baseball, slang, 1800s) An error.
Adjective
duff (comparative duffer, superlative duffest)
- (Britain) Worthless; not working properly, defective.
- Why do I always get a shopping trolley with duff wheels?
- 1996, Catherine Merriman, State of Desire, page 155:
- From its surface, he insisted, plain food became ambrosia, water nectar, and the duffest dope would blow your mind.
- 2009, Christopher Fowler, Paperboy, page 225:
- All the other parts were played by a gallery of Dickensian character actors, including Thorley Walters, Francis Matthews and, yes, Michael Ripper, who lent gravitas to the duffest dialogue lines.
Synonyms
- (defective): bum (US)
Translations
not working properly
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Etymology 3
Origin uncertain; perhaps the same as Etymology 1, above.
Translations
Etymology 4
Originally thieves' slang; probably a back-formation from duffer.
Verb
duff (third-person singular simple present duffs, present participle duffing, simple past and past participle duffed)
Related terms
See also
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