dunny
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /dʌni/
Audio (AU) (file) - Rhymes: -ʌni
Adjective
Adjective
dunny (comparative dunnier, superlative dunniest)
- (Britain dialectal) Somewhat deaf, hard of hearing.
- 1708, J. Kersey, Dictionary Anglo-Britannicum:
- Dunny, somewhat deaf, deafish.
-
- (Britain dialectal, derogatory euphemistic) Slow to answer: stupid, unintelligent.
- a. 1791,, F. Grose, Olio, p. 105:
- What the devil are you dunny? won't you give me no answer?
- a. 1791,, F. Grose, Olio, p. 105:
Derived terms
- dunnily
- dunniness
Noun
dunny (plural dunnies)
- (Britain dialectal, derogatory euphemistic, obsolete) A dummy, an unintelligent person.
Etymology 3
A clipped form of English cant dunnakin (“outhouse”) + -y (“forming affectionate diminutives”). Dunnakin, dunnekin, etc.[3][4] are of uncertain etymology,[5] but probably from some form of English cant danna (“shit”) + ken (“pejorative slang for house”). The Scottish and North English senses may derive from Etymology 4 below, either under influence from English cant or as its original source.
Noun
dunny (plural dunnies)
- (Britain slang, obsolete) Alternative form of danna: shit. [From 1859.]
- (Australia and New Zealand slang, also dated Scotland and Northern England ) An outhouse: an outbuilding used as a lavatory. [From 1933.]
- 2010, Christopher Milne, "The Boy Who Lived in a Dunny" in The Day Our Teacher Went Mad and Other Naughty Stories for Good Boys and Girls, p. 108:
- ‘Until you wake up to yourself, you can live in the old dunny for all I care.’
- ‘All right, I will,’ said Tony.
- (Australia and New Zealand slang) Any other place or fixture used for urination and defecation: a latrine; a lavatory; a toilet.
- (Scotland, Northern England, slang, dated) A passageway, particularly those connecting an outhouse to the main building.
Alternative forms
- danna, dunnee (obsolete)
Synonyms
- (outhouse): See Thesaurus:bathroom
- (toilet): See Thesaurus:toilet
Noun
dunny (plural dunnies)
- (Scotland, Northern England, slang, dated) A cellar, basement, or underground passage.
References
- "dunny, adj.¹", in the Oxford English Dictionary (1897), Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- "dunny, adj.² and n.¹", in the Oxford English Dictionary (1897).
- "Dunnakin" in Humphry T. Potter's New Dictionary of All the Cant and Flash Languages (1790).
- "Dunegan" in Francis Grose's Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue.
- "dunny, n.²", in the Oxford English Dictionary (1972), Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- "Dunny, n.", in the Scottish National Dictionary (2005), Glasgow: University of Glasgow Press.
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