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sly
[ slahy ]
adjective
- cunning or wily:
sly as a fox.
- stealthy, insidious, or secret.
Synonyms: clandestine, underhand, furtive, surreptitious
- playfully artful, mischievous, or roguish:
sly humor.
sly
/ slaɪ /
adjective
- crafty; artful
a sly dodge
- insidious; furtive
a sly manner
- playfully mischievous; roguish
sly humour
noun
- on the slyin a secretive manner
Derived Forms
- ˈslyly, adverb
- ˈslyness, noun
Other Words From
- slyly adverb
- slyness noun
- un·sly adjective unslyer unslyest
- un·slyly adverb
- un·slyness noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of sly1
Word History and Origins
Origin of sly1
Idioms and Phrases
- on the sly, secretly;
a tryst on the sly.
More idioms and phrases containing sly
see on the sly .Example Sentences
It’s a sly note of social observation from Beckett on how inhumanity is transmitted in a play that is focused on our mutual dependence in a world without metaphysical foundation or solace.
Terhune’s irony and satire can be so sly that some people don’t get the joke, thinking that Alpha Male is not an act but the comic’s true self.
It is full of in-jokes of the era, but with sly and not-so-sly gusto along with a gifted cast, Shaw turned this into riotous supper-club opera.
The Archangel Michael is the patron saint of police officers, so I wanted to ask Jurado if her pendant was a sly dig at her antagonists.
“This defendant has been neither sly nor dishonest nor seeking gain for himself,” she said.
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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