Dingy

来自Big Physics

google

ref

mid 18th century: perhaps based on Old English dynge ‘dung’.


Ety img dingy.png

wiktionary

ref

From English dialectal (Kentish) dingy(“dirty”), of unknown origin, though probably from an unrecorded Middle English *dingy, *düngy, from Old English *dyncgiġ(“covered with dung, dirty”), an umlaut form of Old English duncge, dung(“dung”), equivalent to dung +‎ -y. [1]

dingy (plural dingies)


etymonline

ref

dingy (adj.)

1736, in Kentish dialect, "dirty, foul," a word of uncertain origin, but perhaps related to dung. Meaning "soiled, tarnished, having a dull, brownish color" (from grime or weathering) is by 1751; hence "shabby, shady, drab" (by 1855). The noun dinge "dinginess" (1816) is a back-formation; as a derogatory word for "black person, Negro," by 1848. Related: Dingily; dinginess.