dizzard
English
editEtymology
editUncertain; perhaps from dizzy + -ard. Compare dotard.
Noun
editdizzard (plural dizzards)
- (obsolete) A jester or fool.
- (obsolete) An idiot.
- 1624, Democritus Junior [pseudonym; Robert Burton], The Anatomy of Melancholy: […], 2nd edition, Oxford, Oxfordshire: […] John Lichfield and James Short, for Henry Cripps, →OCLC:, New York Review of Books, 2001, p.43:
- Lactantius, in his book of Wisdom, proves them to be dizzards, fools, asses, madmen, so full of absurd and ridiculous tenets and brain-sick positions, that to his thinking never any old woman doted worse.
- 1902, John Kendrick Bangs, chapter 10, in Olympian Nights:
- "You're a dizzard!" I retorted. "And a noodle and a jolt-head; […] you're a Hatter!" I shrieked the last epithet.