idle
adjEtymology
From Middle English idel, ydel, from Old English īdel, from Proto-West Germanic *īdal, from Proto-Germanic *īdalaz. Cognate with Dutch ijdel (“vain, meaningless”), ijl (“rareified, skinny”), iel (“thin, slender”); German Low German iedel (“vain, idle”); German eitel (“vain, conceited”); and possibly Old Norse illr ("bad"; > English ill).
Definitions
Empty, vacant.
Not being used appropriately
Not being used appropriately; not occupied; (of time) with no, no important, or not much activity.
- idle hours
- My computer hibernates after it has been idle for 30 minutes.
- The majority of accounts require no minimum balance and charge no monthly service fee. Where monthly fees and balance requirements exist, they're low. You earn no interest on the idle money in the account.
Not engaged in any occupation or employment
Not engaged in any occupation or employment; unemployed; inactive; doing nothing in particular.
- idle workmen
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Averse to work, labor or employment
Averse to work, labor or employment; lazy; slothful.
- an idle fellow
Of no importance
Of no importance; useless; worthless; vain; trifling; thoughtless; silly.
- an idle story; idle talk; idle rumor; idle threats; idle pleasures
Light-headed
Light-headed; foolish.
- The youth is idle
To spend (time) in idleness
To spend (time) in idleness; to waste; to consume.
- […] the ne'er-do-anything-at-home who idled his day in immaculate attire and who was banished to Canada on a "remittance," shares his pork and beans with the sourdough, who has scratched rocks and sifted black sand from his infancy.
- While idling the hours I trace verses / On the inside of wrappers embellishing cans Of Bordeaux mackerel, caught in Monterey.
- he […] lay in his blind idling the hours until the rising tide would send the shorebirds in across the marsh. Not far off two sons of Southern Italy were lazily transferring a stack of cut salt hay to a one horse hay cart.
To lose or spend time doing nothing, or without being employed in business.
- to idle in an IRC channel
- He had already heard of the young man's projected journey — evidently the Comte de Combourg had written many letters while his son idled at St. Malo […]
Of an engine
Of an engine: to run at a slow speed, or out of gear; to tick over.
- When train heating is in operation the diesel engine is arranged to idle at 550 r.p.m. which is the minimum at which the generator will deliver its full rated output.
- High levels of all pollutants were found during time idling in stations.
To cause (an engine) to idle (run at a slow speed, or out of gear).
- The driver idled his engine until the car finally stalled.
To make (workers, students, etc) idle
To make (workers, students, etc) idle; to leave without work.
- [L]ayoffs idled 1,900 workers in Ohio and 1,000 in Indiana. At the same time, an Indiana assembly plant recalled 1,200 workers.
The state of idling, of being idle.
The lowest selectable thrust or power setting of an engine.
- a lumpy idle
- A slight valve tap was audible at idle but was not noticeable otherwise.
An idle animation.
An idle game.
A surname.
A suburb in the City of Bradford, West Yorkshire, England (OS grid ref SE1737).
A river, the River Idle in Nottinghamshire, England, which flows into the River Trent.
Initialism of Integrated DeveLopment Environment.
Initialism of Integrated Development and Learning Environment.
Acronym of indolent lesion of epithelial origin.
The neighborhood
- neighboridling speedsense 3
- neighborflight idle
- neighborground idle
Derived
bone-idle, bone idle, idle as Ludlam's dog, idle asset, idledom, idleful, idle game, idle hands are the Devil's playthings, idle hands are the devil's tools, idle hands are the devil's workshop, idlehead, idleheaded, idlehood, idleness, idle pulley, idleship, idlesome, idle threat, idle time, idle wheel, idling, idlish, idly, nonidle, overidle, the devil makes work for idle hands, idle hands make work for the Devil, the Devil finds work for idle hands, unidle, idler, idlingly, nonidling
Vish — recursive loop
A definitional loop anchored at idle. Each word in the ring is defined by the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself. Scroll to it and watch.
A definitional loop anchored at idle. Each word in the ring appears in the definition of the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself.
7 hops · closes at idle
curated · pre-corpus. live cycle detection across the full graph is the next major milestone.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA