a. U. S. colloq. [From TEENY a.2] Very tiny, delicately small, ‘wee.’

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1863.  Mrs. Whitney, Faith Gartney’s Girlhood, v. 46. She would open the window a ‘teenty little crack,’ so that he might hear it better.

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1894.  C. F. Woolson, in Harper’s Mag., Feb., 429. You were six months old—a little teenty baby.

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1896.  Chicago Advance, 20 Feb., 260/2. Saving our teenty, dainty roses.

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