Dictionary

puny

adjective pu·ny \ˈpyü-nē\

: small and weak

: not very large, impressive, or effective

pu·ni·erpu·ni·est

Full Definition of PUNY

:  slight or inferior in power, size, or importance :  weak
pu·ni·ly \ˈpyü-nə-lē\ adverb
pu·ni·ness \ˈpyü-nē-nəs\ noun
ADVERTISEMENT

Origin of PUNY

Anglo-French puisné younger, weakly, literally, born afterward, from puis afterward + born
First Known Use: 1593

Related to PUNY

Synonyms
bantam, diminutive, dinky, dwarfish, fine, half-pint, Lilliputian, little, pint-size (or pint-sized), pocket, pocket-size (also pocket-sized), small, pygmy, shrimpy, slight, smallish, subnormal, toylike, undersized (also undersize)
Antonyms
big, biggish, considerable, goodly, grand, great, handsome, husky, king-size (or king-sized), large, largish, outsize (also outsized), overscale (or overscaled), oversize (or oversized), sizable (or sizeable), substantial, tidy, whacking, whopping
PUNY Defined for Kids

puny

adjective pu·ny \ˈpyü-nē\
pu·ni·erpu·ni·est

Definition of PUNY for Kids

1
:  small and weak in size or power
2
:  not very impressive or effective <My boss gave me a puny raise.>

Word History of PUNY

In medieval French puisné, literally, born afterward, was used to mean younger when talking about two people. Borrowed into English, puisne and the phonetic spelling puny came to be used of anyone in a position of less importance than another. By the time of the playwright William Shakespeare puny no longer suggested relative rank, but had come to mean weak or feeble—a meaning the word retains today.

Browse

Next Word in the Dictionary: punyaPrevious Word in the Dictionary: PunukAll Words Near: puny
ADVERTISEMENT
How to use a word that (literally) drives some people nuts.
Test your vocab with our fun, fast game
Ailurophobia, and 9 other unusual fears