It's the Word of the Day podcast for June 17th.
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Today's word is wifty, spelled W-I-F-T-Y.
Wifty is an adjective.
It's a synonym of the word ditzy.
It describes something or someone eccentrically silly or scatterbrained.
Here's the word used.
In a sentence from Joy Ride, a memoir by Susan Orlean.
When he dreams, he dreams about moving to Wyoming, which he has visited with his family.
Sometimes, when he talks about this, it sounds as ordinary and hard-boiled as a real estate appraisal.
Other times, it can sound fantastical and wifty and achingly naive.
Wents?
Wifty.
Wordsmiths have been wondering for a while.
The earliest print evidence of wifty comes from the early 20th century,
though the word was certainly being used in spoken English before that.
The adjective suffix Y is clear enough.
When added to another word, it can mean full of as in muddy,