Find the word definition

Crossword clues for baldy

The Collaborative International Dictionary
baldy

baldy \baldy\ n. a person who has a bald head; -- a deprecatory term.

Syn: baldhead, baldpate.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
baldy

"bald-headed person," 1850, from bald + -y (3).

Wiktionary
baldy

alt. (context informal English) Someone who is bald. n. (context informal English) Someone who is bald.

WordNet
baldy

n. a person whose head is bald [syn: baldhead, baldpate]

Wikipedia
Baldy

Baldy is a name for a person with hair loss.

Baldy or Baldie may also refer to:

Places

  • numerous peaks – see List of peaks named Baldy
  • Bałdy, a village in Poland
  • Mount Baldy Ski Lifts or Baldy, a ski resort in California

People:

  • Baldy (nickname)
  • pen name of Clifford H. Baldowski (1917–1999), American editorial cartoonist
  • Leonard Baldy (1927-1960), Chicago police officer and the city's first helicopter traffic reporter

Other uses:

  • Baldy (Beanie Baby), a Beanie Baby eagle produced by Ty Inc.
Bałdy

Bałdy is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Purda, within Olsztyn County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately south-west of Purda and south of the regional capital Olsztyn.

Before 1772 the area was part of Kingdom of Poland, 1772-1945 Prussia and Germany ( East Prussia).

The village has a population of 100.

Baldy (Jackson County, Oregon)

Baldy is a mountain located north-northeast of Talent and east-northeast of Phoenix in Jackson County, Oregon.

It forms part of the eastern edge of the Rogue Valley, and is about west-northwest of Grizzly Peak and south-southeast of Roxy Ann Peak.

Baldy (nickname)

Baldy or Baldie is a nickname for:

  • Brian Baldinger (born 1959), American football player and broadcaster
  • Fred Brown (ice hockey) (1900-1970), Canadian National Hockey League player
  • Dominick Canterino (died 1990), American mobster convicted for racketeering, nicknamed "Baldy Dom"
  • Baldwin Cooke (1888-1953), American comedic actor, also known as "Baldy Cooke"
  • Harold Cotton (ice hockey) (1902-1984), Canadian National Hockey League player
  • Wayne Fox (born 1959), former Australian rules footballer
  • F. A. Harper (1905–1973), American academic, economist and writer
  • Arthur Hezlet (1914-2007), Royal Navy vice-admiral
  • Henry Jones (pitcher), American Major League Baseball pitcher in 1890
  • Benn Karr (1893-1968), American Major League Baseball pitcher
  • Alan Longo (born 1950), alleged Brooklyn mobster convicted of racketeering, nicknamed "Baldie"
  • Baldy Louden (1883-1935), American Major League Baseball player
  • Calum MacKay (1927-2001), Canadian National Hockey League player
  • Lawrence Northcott (1908-1986), Canadian National Hockey League player
  • Eddie Palmer (baseball) (1893-1983), American Major League Baseball player in 1917
  • Charles Alan Pownall (1887-1975), US Navy rear admiral and Governor of Guam
  • Baldy Jack Rose (1987-1947), American gambler and mobster in New York City born Jacob Rosenzweig
  • Ed Silch (1865-1895), American Major League Baseball player in the 1888 season
  • William Farrar Smith (1824-1903), Union general in the American Civil War
  • Vince Sherlock (1910-1997), American Major League Baseball player in 1935
  • Charles Spittal (1874-1971), Canadian hockey player, one of the first to play professionally
  • Blaine Thomas (1888-1915), American Major League Baseball pitcher
  • Dave Tomlinson (Canadian football) (c. 1926-in or after 1998), Canadian Football League player
  • Baldy Wittman (c. 1871-?), professional football player in the Ohio League (1903-1911)

Usage examples of "baldy".

Baldwin-promptly shortened to Baldy by Axel and his regular patrons-demonstrated more interest in schnapps than he did in finding the Tory Gold, and showed no inclination to leave Paradise.

Horsethief Shorty and that Carl Montana and the state engineer, Nelson Bookman, all sitting around a campfire up by the Little Baldy Bear Lakes, roasting miniature Joe Mondragons skewered like hot dogs on aspen twigs over their campfire.

The other gym rat traded places with Baldy, then Baldy and Platt spotted him while he did his benches.

Baldy kept his eyes glued to the telescreen, manipulating what seemed like a dozen dials at once.

It was because the presence of the Baldies gave them a purpose, a direction, a goal.

Ross to interpret: Stav, and Kosta as well, welcomed more than feared the prospect of the Baldies trying to find and get aboard their ship.

The proof that the Baldies were definitely here had caused the first rule to be implemented: their cautionary radio silence was now, except for dire emergency, total.

Eveleen knew that she must look for anything out of place, but she kept envisioning Baldies shrouded in cloth, lurking about on the edges of crowds.

That is an astounding coincidence, if the Kayu, or even the Baldies, were not manipulating the priestesses without their knowing.

Did you not all agree that the Baldies might not be able to tell the difference between you and the scavengers?

The priestesses were not looking for visitors from the future any more than they had recognized the Baldies as beings from another world.

But you must then prevent the Baldies from relinearizing them for at least .

Are you building up to some big idea about the Baldies maybe causing that volcano to blow?

She and the other Time Agents had certainly experienced enough outside interference from the hairless, humanoid aliens they called Baldies to make every incident that did not have clear cause and effect appear suspicious.

The Baldies, or whoever had those weapons, were obviously on the prowl, and there was more than one.