释义 |
nounPlural dixies ˈdɪksi A large iron cooking pot used by campers or soldiers. Example sentencesExamples - It was either grass that was boiled up, or mangel wurzels and it was brought in with big dixies and had to be measured out.
Synonyms cooking utensil, container, receptacle, vessel
Origin Early 20th century: from Hindi degcī 'cooking pot', from Persian degča, diminutive of deg 'pot'. proper nounˈdɪksi An informal name for the southern states of the US.
Phrases Engage in unrealistic fantasies; waste one's time. until you nail that down, you're just whistling Dixie—you're in a real mess Example sentencesExamples - If a garden doesn't drain, you're whistling Dixie.
- Nonetheless, linguists ain't just whistling Dixie when they say there are no linguistic limits to the number of coordinates.
- When those fish on your hook move their lips, they aren't just whistling Dixie, they're trying desperately to keep on breathing.
- The board is whistling Dixie as it thinks it can summon up a contesting bid higher than $4.17 without showing a very sharp rise in recurrent earnings.
- Dean wasn't just whistling Dixie when he made his infamous remark about reaching out to bubbas bearing Confederate flags.
- Republicans have good reason to whistle Dixie.
- They ain't whistling Dixie when they say they don't make them like they used to.
- Sharon rebuked him ever so slightly but is really whistling Dixie.
- Easton ain't just whistling Dixie either; she's been involved in this community as an active and family-minded member for several decades.
- I'm inclined to believe that the Sheik is just whistling Dixie.
Origin Mid 19th century: origin uncertain. The phrase ‘Dixie's land’ is first recorded in the 1859 minstrel song ‘Jonny Roach’, typically attributed to the minstrel performer Daniel D. Emmett. Emmett also wrote and performed ‘I Wish I Was in Dixie’ later in the same year; this song, now known simply as ‘Dixie’, became enormously popular during the American Civil War and led to the association of the name with the American South. |