fuddle
English
Etymology
Compare Dutch vod (“soft”), German dialect fuddeln (“to swindle”).
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -ʌdəl
Verb
fuddle (third-person singular simple present fuddles, present participle fuddling, simple past and past participle fuddled)
- (transitive) To confuse or befuddle.
- (transitive) To intoxicate.
- (intransitive) To become intoxicated; to get drunk.
- 1860, John Diprose, The red, white & blue monster song book
- Pipes I blew, on malt I fuddled, / A lushy man! / Till my mind and head got muddled, / Dissipated man!
- 1860, John Diprose, The red, white & blue monster song book
Derived terms
- (to confuse): fuddlesome (“confusing”)
- (to become intoxicated): fuddlecap, fuddler (“drunkard”), fuddling (“intoxication”)
Translations
confuse or befuddle
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Noun
fuddle (countable and uncountable, plural fuddles)
- Intoxication.
- (uncountable) Intoxicating drink; liquor.
- Muddle, confusion.
- (Britain, dialectal, Derbyshire, Nottinghamshire, Bedfordshire) A party or picnic where attendees bring food and wine; a kind of potluck.
- 2009, thornbird [username], “Do you have a Christmas fuddle at your workplace?”, in Toluna:
- When I was I work I loved the time when we had a fuddle. Everybody decided what they were going to bring so we had an even balance of grub. We had sandwiches or cobs of ham, cheese and pate, crisps, sausage rolls, pickled onions cocktail sausages, vol au vonts, swiss roll, and mince pies. We weren’t allowed booze on the premises but we made do with alcohol free drink. We were as stuffed as pigs and had a job to work for the rest of the day.
- 2013 December 16, nedluddsmother [username], “My work insists on having a Christmas fuddle, but it sounds like a sexual offence to me.”, in Reddit, r/BritishProblems:
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