tiddly

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /tɪd.li/
  • (file)

Etymology 1

Noun

tiddly (plural tiddlies)

  1. (slang) An alcoholic beverage.
    • 2002, Pat Patterson, SpiritPath, iUniverse, →ISBN, p. 429:
      As far as he could tell, except for her evening ‘tiddlies’, two rather hefty drinks taken ‘neat’ without the diluting benefit of water or ice, his mother had very nearly stopped her drinking.
    • 2010, Jeff Jacobson, Wormfood, Medallion Press, →ISBN, p. 54:
      Well, hell, I figured we’d just save that money, get us a few tiddlies at Fat Ernst’s instead.
    • 2012, Johnny Mack Hood, Cannibal Caper, AuthorHouse, →ISBN, p. 101:
      JC heard him remark, “I need a bit of the tiddly my dear. It’s been a hard day.” Tiddly, hm, must be an English drink?
Synonyms

Adjective

tiddly (comparative tiddlier, superlative tiddliest)

  1. Somewhat drunk
Synonyms

Etymology 2

Adjective

tiddly (comparative more tiddly, superlative most tiddly)

  1. (colloquial) tiny; little
    Jeff wouldn't slow down, not even a tiddly bit.
Synonyms

Etymology 3

Interjection

tiddly

  1. Alternative form of diddly (a trill sound)
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