Naughty
1Naughty @ 40 — Theatrical release poster Directed by Jagmohan Mundhra Produced by Anuj Sharma Kiran Sharma …
2Naughty — Naugh ty, a. [Compar. {Naughtier}; superl. {Naughtiest}.] 1. Having little or nothing. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] [Men] that needy be and naughty, help them with thy goods. Piers Plowman. [1913 Webster] 2. Worthless; bad; good for nothing. [Obs.]… …
3Naughty — may refer to: Naughty (album), an album by Chaka Khan Walter Hiers See also All pages beginning with Naughty Noughties, a slang name for the years 2000 to 2009 This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same title. If an …
4naughty — (adj.) late 14c., naugti needy, having nothing, from O.E. nawiht (see NAUGHT (Cf. naught)) + Y (Cf. y) (2). Sense of wicked, evil, morally wrong is attested from 1520s; specific meaning sexually promiscuous is from 1869. The more tame main modern …
5naughty — [adj1] bad, misbehaved annoying, badly behaved*, contrary, disobedient, disorderly, evil, exasperating, fiendish, fractious, froward, headstrong, impish, indecorous, insubordinate, intractable, mischievous, obstreperous, perverse, playful,… …
6naughty — index improper, iniquitous, peccant (culpable), perverse, reprehensible, reprobate Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton …
7naughty — *bad, evil, ill, wicked Analogous words: mischievous, roguish, impish, waggish (see PLAYFUL): froward, balky, restive, wayward, *contrary, perverse …
8naughty — ► ADJECTIVE (naughtier, naughtiest) 1) (especially of a child) disobedient; badly behaved. 2) informal mildly rude or indecent. DERIVATIVES naughtily adverb naughtiness noun. ORIGIN originally in the sense «possessing nothin …
9naughty — [nôt′ē] adj. naughtier, naughtiest [ME naugti: see NAUGHT] 1. Obs. wicked; bad; evil 2. not behaving properly; mischievous or disobedient: used esp. of children or their behavior 3. showing lack of decorum; improper, indelicate, or obscene SYN.… …
10naughty — Used as a vocative element in Shakespeare, this word has the force of ‘a thing of naught’, something totally worthless. ‘Thou naughty varlet’, in Much Ado About Nothing (4:ii) or ‘thou naughty knave’, in Julius Caesar (l:i) is thus a serious… …