Emily Dickinson Lexicon
Lexicon: giddy – gimblet
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giddy, adj. [Fr.]
- Cheerful; silly.
- Difficult to reach; high.
- Reeling; whirling.
gift (-s), n. [OE.]
- Present; thing bestowed gratuitously or without expectation of compensation.
- Product.
- Payment.
- Attributes; benefits; qualities.
gifted, adj. [see gift, n.]
Endowed with a special quality of ability; talented.
gig, n. [L. gigno.]
One-horse carriage with one pair of wheels.
gigantic, adj. [L.]
Enormous; very great; of extraordinary size.
giggle (-ing), v. [OE.]
Laugh; joke.
gilded, adj. [OE.]
Overlaid with gold leaf of liquid; illuminated.
gilt, adj. [see gilded, adj.]
gilt, v. [see gilded, adj.]
Covered in gold.
gimblet, n. [variant of gimlet < OFr.]
Tool for making holes; kind of boring tool; [fig.] jabbing pain; searing grief; jolting sensation of anguish.