a. Also 9 whimy. [f. WHIM sb.1 + -Y1.] Of the nature of a whim; full of whims; whimsical, capricious.
1785. Strothers Jrnl. (1912), 66. A whimmy thought struck him that Aram was following him for the bone.
1827. Coleridge, in Lit. Rem. (1839), IV. 314. The study of Rabbinical literature either finds a man whimmy, or makes him so.
1880. Adel. Sartoris, Past Hours, I. 162. She is very uncertain and whimmy, and has an immense amour propre about it.
1889. Mary E. Carter, Mrs. Severn, II. iv. Perhaps it is only a whim, said Anna. Shes not a whimy body.