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wiggy

Etymology 1 a. 1 crazy. 2 uninhibited. Etymology 2

a. wiglike.

Usage examples of "wiggy".

My friend Wiggy came and spent the evening with me, introducing an element of normality into a day which had been given over to making arrangements, though truth to tell there were few enough of these.

It was during a visit to the National Gallery that I met my friend Wiggy, Caroline Wilson.

My mother was enchanted by her, and not only because Wiggy is an artist of a sort.

I would not have put it past her to doubt the validity of such attachments, although Wiggy and I were of an age to have chalked up a certain amount of experience, most of it uncertain.

I thought of my friend Wiggy, waiting in for a visit from her lover, and grew angry on her behalf Better a marriage, however brief and unsatisfactory, than an arrangement such as hers.

I would take Wiggy with me, although I knew that she might prove recalcitrant.

I resolved to telephone Wiggy and invite her, quite casually, out for a meal.

Then I rang Wiggy, and suggested a meal, which I thought might inaugurate various other meals.

I said as much to Wiggy, who did not particularly want to be reminded of this.

If anything she was more interested in Wiggy, who wore her usual polite pleasant expression.

The time when Wiggy felt she had to be tactful with me seemed to be over.

I could not see her, as 79 Wiggy saw her, as a simple unfortunate, whom we were bound to visit in the spirit of nineteenth-century ladies visiting stricken cottagers.

In the 84 cafe where I remembered eating a toasted sandwich we sat down gratefully at the back, away from the door, Wiggy with her unopened sketch pad, still in its plastic bag, on her knees.

In any event there was no indication that either Wiggy or I was needed, even remembered.

I felt ashamed, slightly disgraced, felt wrong in being present on this Saturday afternoon, when ordinary people were at leisure, when Wiggy and I would soon be at leisure ourselves.