English

edit
 
Tree on a windy day

Etymology 1

edit

From Middle English windy, from Old English windiġ (windy), from Proto-Germanic *windigaz (windy), equivalent to wind +‎ -y. Cognate with Saterland Frisian wiendich (windy), West Frisian winich (windy), Dutch winderig (windy), German Low German windig (windy), German windig (windy), Swedish vindig (windy), Icelandic vindugur (windy).

Pronunciation

edit

Adjective

edit

windy (comparative windier, superlative windiest)

  1. Accompanied by wind.
    It was a long and windy night.
  2. Unsheltered and open to the wind.
    They shagged in a windy bus shelter.
  3. Empty and lacking substance.
    They made windy promises they would not keep.
  4. Long-winded; orally verbose.
  5. (informal) Flatulent.
    The Tex-Mex meal had made them somewhat windy.
  6. (slang) Nervous, frightened.
    • 1995, Pat Barker, The Ghost Road, Penguin, published 2014, The Regeneration Trilogy, page 848:
      The thing is he's not windy, he's a perfectly good soldier, no more than reasonably afraid of rifle and machine-gun bullets, shells, grenades.
Synonyms
edit
Antonyms
edit
Translations
edit

Noun

edit

windy (plural windies)

  1. (colloquial) A fart.
Translations
edit

Etymology 2

edit

wind (to curve, bend) +‎ -y

Pronunciation

edit

Adjective

edit

windy (comparative windier, superlative windiest)

  1. (of a path etc) Having many bends; winding, twisting or tortuous.
Usage notes
edit

Due to ambiguity with the homograph described above, the word winding is generally preferred in print.

Derived terms
edit
Translations
edit