a. Also 9 whimy. [f. WHIM sb.1 + -Y1.] Of the nature of a whim; full of whims; whimsical, capricious.

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1785.  Strother’s Jrnl. (1912), 66. A whimmy thought struck him that Aram was following him for the bone.

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1827.  Coleridge, in Lit. Rem. (1839), IV. 314. The study of Rabbinical literature either finds a man whimmy, or makes him so.

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1880.  Adel. Sartoris, Past Hours, I. 162. She is very uncertain and whimmy, and has an immense amour propre about it.

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1889.  Mary E. Carter, Mrs. Severn, II. iv. ‘Perhaps it is only a whim,’ said Anna. ‘She’s not a whimy body.’

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