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Answer for the clue "Kind of putty ", 5 letters:
silly

Alternative clues for the word silly

Word definitions for silly in dictionaries

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
a. 1 (label en archaic) pitiable; deserving of compassion; helpless. 2 (label en obsolete) simple, unsophisticated, ordinary; rustic, ignorant. 3 foolish, showing a lack of good sense and wisdom; frivolous, trifling. 4 irresponsible, showing irresponsible ...

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Old English gesælig "happy, fortuitous, prosperous" (related to sæl "happiness"), from Proto-Germanic *sæligas (cognates: Old Norse sæll "happy," Old Saxon salig , Middle Dutch salich , Old High German salig , German selig "blessed, happy, blissful," Gothic ...

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
I. adjective COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES a silly grin ▪ ‘Wipe that silly grin off your face!’ the teacher shouted. a silly/stupid mistake ▪ You need to be able to laugh at your own silly mistakes. a stupid/silly question (= one whose answer is obvious ...

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Silly \Sil"ly\, a. [Compar. Sillier ; superl. Silliest .] [OE. seely, sely, AS. s?lig, ges?lig, happy, good, fr. s?l, s?l, good, happy, s?l good fortune, happines; akin to OS. s[=a]lig, a, good, happy, D. zalig blessed, G. selig, OHG. s[=a]l[=i]g, Icel. ...

Usage examples of silly.

And do you also know that had your egocentric, blind lead wizard not been so protective of his silly secret of the training of young females in the craft, you could have easily stopped me from accomplishing all that I have?

Rose yawned, talked fitfully about the gayeties of the coming week, worked half a leaf on an antimacassar, and sang three or four silly little coquettish songs which somehow jarred on every one.

I said a silly thing when I said we would do what Barish would have done.

They boast and shout and sing and drink themselves silly and naturally they generally get to basting the girls as well.

In addition to all this they were without honor as Sir Bulland knew it, and perhaps as any one other than a Beduin knows it, and would but have laughed at his silly suggestion.

Hope devotes so much serious and sympathetic study to the man called Tristram of Blent, a man who throughout burning boyhood thought of nothing but a silly old estate, we feel even in Mr.

Not for the first time, she wished she did not have to wear the silly thingbut she was not the kind of wild and rebellious woman who would shed her skirts and corsets for a vest and bloomers, and stride off to march in a suffragette parade.

A perfect carpet of it is at our feet, and the brooklet makes the sweetest murmuring as it glides onward through the grove, telling all the while, like some silly schoolgirl, where you may look for it.

To have risked the life of himself and his groom, not to mention the lives of two prime pieces of horseflesh to rescue a silly girl who did not need rescuing, was enough to try the patience of a saint.

He despised the way Americans felt the need to attach silly macho schoolboy nicknames to their leaders.

It seemed silly that the natives should exist in huts, raising only a milpa, or small patch of corn cleared in the native jungle, and giving that no more cultivation than it required, and rarely doing anything else in the line of work except gather a few thick maguey leaves to repair a hut after wind blew the thatching away.

If what are miscalled the lower animals were as silly as man is, they would all perish from the earth in a year.

It was a point of view to which Roland still held, Eddie felt quite sure, notwithstanding the fact that, while riding Blaine the Mono, their lives had been saved by a few well-timed silly questions.

Syntactic programs ranging from the deeply esoteric to the plain silly had been employed, but they had not come close to cracking one word or a hint of a morpheme, of what was now being called The Gabble.

When the doctor palpated and pressed his abdomen, he made a scornful grimace, as though finding all this silly and useless.