Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
dummy
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Remove ads
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
From dumb + -y. Pacifier sense from dummy teat where dummy is in the sense of a nonfunctional replica.
Pronunciation
Noun
dummy (plural dummies)
- (dated) A silent person; a person who does not talk.
- 1940, Carson McCullers, The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter:
- The man's name […] was engraved in the centre, and beneath this, written in ink with the same elaborate precision as the engraving, there was a brief message.
I am a deaf-mute, but I read the lips and understand what is said to me. Please do not shout.
[…] Singer looked very carefully at his lips when he spoke—he had noticed that before. But a dummy!
- A stupid person.
- (African-American Vernacular, Baltimore, slang) A term of address.
- A figure of a person or animal used by a ventriloquist; a puppet.
- Something constructed with the size and form of a human, to be used in place of a person.
- Synonyms: mannequin, marionette
- To understand the effects of the accident, we dropped a dummy from the rooftop.
- 1886, Peter Christen Asbjørnsen, translated by H.L. Brækstad, Folk and Fairy Tales, page 304:
- "There's a remedy, it does try one, but never mind," said Gubjor; "I shall make a dummy baby, which I shall bury in the churchyard, and then the dead will believe they have got the child, take my word, they won't know but what it is the real baby!"
- A person who is the mere tool of another; a man of straw.
- A deliberately nonfunctional device or tool used in place of a functional one.
- The hammer and drill in the display are dummies.
- 1950, National Bureau of Standards Miscellaneous Publication, page 138:
- The second method was to use two loadometers under the wheels of one axle, mounting the wheels of the other axle on what we called "equalizing blocks" or "dummies." By that method the two axles are brought into the same horizontal plane […]
- (Australia, New Zealand, UK, Ireland) A pacifier; a plastic or rubber teat used to soothe or comfort a baby. [from 20th c.]
- Synonyms: see Thesaurus:pacifier
- The baby wants her dummy.
- 2006, Tizzie Hall, Save Our Sleep: A Parents′ Guide Towards Happy, Sleeping Babies from Birth to Two Years, MacMillan, published 2009, page 200:
- Then on the fifth day, at the first sleep of the day, remove the dummy and follow my settling guide for your baby′s age. You should throw all her dummies in the bin to ensure you are not tempted to use them again – even outside sleep times.
- 2011, Simone Cave, Caroline Fertleman, Baby to Toddler Month by Month, page 85:
- We′ve found that going cold turkey works best – you check that your baby isn't ill or teething, then throw all dummies away. When your baby cries for her dummy, you can look her in the eye and say, ‘It′s gone,’ and really mean it.
- (card games, chiefly bridge) A player whose hand is shown and is to be played from by another player.
- (linguistics) A word serving only to make a construction grammatical.
- The pronoun "it" in "It's a mystery why this happened" is a dummy.
- (programming) An unused parameter or value.
- If
flag1is false, the other parameters are dummies.
- (sports, chiefly rugby, soccer) A feigned pass or kick or play in order to deceive an opponent.
- (sports, UK) A bodily gesture meant to fool an opposing player; a feint.
- Synonym: juke
- 2011 January 12, Saj Chowdhury, “Blackpool 2 - 1 Liverpool”, in BBC:
- Raul Meireles was the victim of the home side's hustling on this occasion giving the ball away to the impressive David Vaughan who slipped in Taylor-Fletcher. The striker sold Daniel Agger with the best dummy of the night before placing his shot past keeper Pepe Reina.
- (attributive) A newborn animal that is indifferent to stimulus and does not voluntarily move.
- a dummy calf, lamb, or foal
- (chess) A fairy chess piece that cannot move or capture, but can be captured and used to skip moving another piece.
- 2010 August 21, G. P. Jelliss, “Simple Chess Variants”, in Mayhematics, pages 4, 9:
- In Monochromatic chess moves are only allowed between cells of the same colour. Thus the kings are reduced to ferses, the rooks to dabbabariders, and the knights to dummies. […] The fers and camel can reach all the cells of one colour. The others are more restricted; the dummy cannot move at all, and the commuter can only move back and forth between two cells.
Derived terms
- beat the dummy
- chuck a dummy
- crash test dummy
- dumminess
- dummy bid
- dummy bidder
- dummy board
- dummy car
- dummy foal
- dummy foal syndrome
- dummy half
- dummy it
- dummy light
- dummymander
- dummy out
- dummy pronoun
- dummy-proof
- dummy run
- dummy scissors
- dummy spit
- dummy subject
- dummy text
- dummy variable
- dummy whist
- sell the dummy
- spit the dummy
- tailor's dummy
Related terms
Translations
a silent person
a stupid person
|
figure of a person or animal used by a ventriloquist
something constructed with the size and form of a human
|
pacifier — see pacifier
a deliberately nonfunctional placeholder
|
bridge: the partner of the winning bidder, who shows his or her hand
See also
(non-functional device):
(gesture meant to fool):
Further reading
Verb
dummy (third-person singular simple present dummies, present participle dummying, simple past and past participle dummied)
- To make a mock-up or prototype version of something, without some or all off its intended functionality.
- The carpenters dummied some props for the rehearsals.
- (sports) To feint.
- Synonym: juke
Derived terms
Adverb
dummy (comparative more dummy, superlative most dummy)
Remove ads
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads