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deedy

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

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English

Etymology

From deed + -y. Cognate with Scots deedie, deedy (active). Compare also German tätig (active).

Adjective

deedy (comparative deedier, superlative deediest)

  1. Industrious; active.
    • 2004 December 31, John Derbyshire, “Yes, Un-Deedy”, in National Review:
      The novelist Ivy Compton-Burnett, asked by the London Times to give a brief account of her life, replied: "There isn't much to say. I haven't been at all deedy." Deedy! This is one of those words that, once you have seen it, makes you wonder why it isn't in everyday use. The job interviewer, going through a pile of submitted résumés: "This one's all right, but … no, not deedy enough." The biographer or obituarist: "The next few years were his deediest …" The self-improvement guru: "Deediness depends on a positive attitude!" The psychiatrist's patient: "I married George because he seemed so deedy, but …"
  2. Earnest; serious.
  3. (dialectal) Genuine, authentic; actual, real.

Derived terms

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