dicey
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈdaɪsi/
Audio (General Australian): (file) - Rhymes: -aɪsi
Adjective
dicey (comparative dicier, superlative diciest)
- Fraught with danger.
- Of uncertain, risky outcome.
- 2009 June 17, Blessing-Miles Tendi, “Tsvangirai's dicey strategy”, in The Guardian[1]:
- This was a dicey stratagem because all too often the support Britain rendered played into Zanu-PF's anti-colonial constructions.
- 2012, Jonathan Deutsch, Natalya Murakhver, editors, They Eat That?: A Cultural Encyclopedia of Weird and Exotic Food from Around the World, page 161:
- Devouring the flesh of animals killed on roadways can be a bit dicey.
- 2017 March 4, John Harris, “Hard Brexit is making the case for Scottish independence”, in The Guardian[2]:
- For sure, the economic and fiscal prospects for an independent Scotland look a lot dicier than they did three years ago.
- Of doubtful or uncertain efficacy, provenance, etc.; dodgy.
- 1992, Vincent O'Sullivan, “The Witness Man”, in Palms and Minarets: Selected Stories, page 95:
- As if I'm not a bit past that, Clem thought, as if with his dicey ticker and all he shouldn′t be taking life pretty quietly, instead of waking with the old memoroes disturbing him.
- 2011, Jay Baer, Amber Naslund, The NOW Revolution: 7 Shifts to Make Your Business Faster, Smarter and More Social, page xv:
- If you were in the business of selling dicey meat, the invention of the telephone rocked your world.
- 2011, Keemholems Ojei, The Narcodollar Chieftains: The Narcotics Godfathers[3], page 101:
- Some more birds were scared off by the dicey smell. The man was dying gradually.
- 2025 January 31, Caitlin Owens, “Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s confirmation is a coin toss”, in Axios[4]:
- But on abortion, one of his diciest issues, his repeated commitment to follow Trump's lead seemed to satisfy ardent anti-abortion members, although several Democrats did their best to remind those colleagues that Kennedy's personal values have been in stark contrast with their own.
Synonyms
Derived terms
Translations
fraught with danger
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of uncertain, risky outcome
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