noddify
English
Etymology
From noddy + -fy. First attested in 1583 (see quotations).
Verb
noddify (third-person singular simple present noddifies, present participle noddifying, simple past and past participle noddified)
- (obsolete, transitive) To make a monkey out of; to make (someone) into a noddy.
- 1583, Brian Melbancke, Philotimus. The Warre betwixt Nature and Fortune, London: […] Roger Warde, page 32:
- If I bee zealous in affection, and iealous of her faithe, I ſmoulder away inwardly, without any remedy: If ſhe make me weare hoꝛnes and I not perceiue it, I am noddified of her, and pointed at of others: and so, they crowne a cuckold with a combe, and this is their deſire.
- 1621, Thomas Fitzherbert, chapter VI, in The Obmvtesce of F. T. to the Epphata of D. Collins, page 145:
- […] ſo as M. Collins who hath deifyed him, calling him the diuine man, might rather haue noddified him, and himſelf for company, when he meant to noddify me.
- 1668, Andrew Honyman, “The Preface”, in A Survey of the Inſolent and Infamous Libel, Entituled, Naphtali, &c., Edinburgh, page 8:
- […] and howſoever the weaker brethren muſt be entertained with fair words, and noddified with notional diſputes anent their parity with the beſt, that they may think themſelves ſomewhat: […]
- 1669, James Stewart, “Some Animadverſions upon the Surveyer's Virulent preface and Title-page” (chapter XXI), in Jus populi vindicatum, London, page 446:
- And now laboureth to noddify all into a conſent & congratulatory acquieſcence in his advancement and dignity.
Further reading
- “noddify, v.”, in OED Online , Oxford: Oxford University Press, launched 2000.