nifty
English
Etymology
From *nift + -y. First element is of unknown origin. Possibly theatrical slang, as a shortened, altered form of Magnificat. Alternatively, perhaps a special use of US regional niffed (“put off, peeved”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈnɪfti/
Audio (Southern England): (file) - Rhymes: -ɪfti
Adjective
nifty (comparative niftier, superlative niftiest)
- (colloquial, somewhat dated) Good, smart; useful or beneficial, often in an impressively clever way.
- a nifty trick for reducing your household energy bill
- 2020 January 22, Lewin Day, “Scorigami Bot Charts NFL History In The Making”, in Hackaday[1]:
- The ‘bot makes this easier; scraping the NFL livescores page with some nifty Javascript,[sic] it tracks each game live for potential first-time scores; the most recent as of writing being the Chiefs beating the Texans 51-31. Not only that, but the ‘bot estimates the most likely possible scorigami scores of games in progress, keeping fans on tenterhooks until the final whistle is blown. Or is it a siren in NFL? Inquiring minds need to know.
- (colloquial, somewhat dated) Stylish.
- nifty gear
- You look nifty in that jacket.
- 1933, Stella Blum, Everyday Fashion of the Thirties as pictured in Sears Catalogs, published 1986, page 56:
- The niftiest, snappiest slacks you ever saw!
Derived terms
Translations
good, useful
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Noun
nifty (plural nifties)
- (colloquial, dated) A possibly risqué comic story or anecdote.
- 1929, Air Wonder Stories:
- New subscribers are the life of our party (any advertiser will tell you that) just as the regular reader of CLIPPINGS becomes the life of any party (and why not with such a supply of “nifties” and bon mots).
- 1950 April 8, Billboard, page 146:
- Because some of the stories that the Sultana told are nifties, the plays are sometimes edited. This facilitates production and eliminates a lot of questions from the kids when they get home.
- 2011, Amnon Kabatchnik, Blood on the Stage, 1950-1975, page 580:
- “Miss Fletcher knows exactly what she is doing, goes about her business with gratifying swiftness and comes up with a finish worthy of one of Roald Dahl's little nifties,” wrote Douglas Watt.
- (colloquial, dated) A trick.
- 2005, Film History, volume 17, page 195:
- […] Winfield Sheehan had pulled a nifty on the wise guys of Hollywood and the film colony in Southern California when he disappeared for a week with a print of Sunrise, the Murnau picture recently completed.