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trifle
[ trahy-fuhl ]
noun
- an article or thing of very little value.
Synonyms: ,
- a matter, affair, or circumstance of trivial importance or significance.
- a small, inconsiderable, or trifling sum of money.
- a small quantity or amount of anything; a little:
She's still a trifle angry.
- a literary, musical, or artistic work of a light or trivial character having no great or lasting merit; bagatelle.
- a kind of pewter of medium hardness.
- trifles, articles made of this.
- English Cooking. a dessert usually consisting of custard and cake soaked in wine or liqueur, and jam, fruit, or the like.
verb (used without object)
- to deal lightly or without due seriousness or respect:
Don't trifle with me!
- to play or toy by handling or fingering:
He sat trifling with a pen.
- to act or talk in an idle or frivolous way.
- to pass time idly or frivolously; waste time; idle.
verb (used with object)
- to pass or spend (time) idly or frivolously (usually followed by away ).
Synonyms:
trifle
/ ˈ³Ù°ù²¹Éª´ÚÉ™±ô /
noun
- a thing of little or no value or significance
- a small amount; bit
a trifle more enthusiasm
- a cold dessert made with sponge cake spread with jam or fruit, soaked in wine or sherry, covered with a custard sauce and cream, and decorated
- a type of pewter of medium hardness
- articles made from this pewter
verb
- intrusually foll bywith to deal (with) as if worthless; dally
to trifle with a person's affections
- to waste (time) frivolously
Derived Forms
- ˈ³Ù°ù¾±´Ú±ô±ð°ù, noun
Other ˜yÐÄvlog Forms
- ³Ù°ù¾±î€ƒf±ô±ð°ù noun
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of trifle1
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of trifle1
Example Sentences
That said, it’s a trifle on the scale of this 10-story whipped cream cake.
“To make trifle, I’d have told you how to make the custard, how to make the sponge cake, probably even how to make the jam.â€
"I remember coming here with my mum to buy trifle and she used to buy chocolate cakes here for me and my brother on our birthdays."
A touch bewildered, a trifle unsteady on his feet.
That Oscar-nominated film is far more gentle and sincere than “Challengers,†a trim, naughty, ferociously well-acted trifle about characters more likely to scrawl something foul on a bathroom stall than quote Heraclitus.
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