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View synonyms for idle

idle

[ahyd-l]

adjective

idler, idlest 
  1. not working or active; unemployed; doing nothing.

    idle workers.

    Synonyms: sluggish
    Antonyms: industrious, busy
  2. not spent or filled with activity.

    idle hours.

  3. not in use or operation; not kept busy.

    idle machinery.

  4. habitually doing nothing or avoiding work; lazy.

  5. of no real worth, importance, or significance.

    idle talk.

  6. having no basis or reason; baseless; groundless.

    idle fears.

  7. frivolous; vain.

    idle pleasures.

    Synonyms: wasteful
  8. meaningless; senseless.

    idle threats.

  9. futile; unavailing.

    idle rage.



verb (used without object)

idled, idling 
  1. to pass time doing nothing.

  2. to move, loiter, or saunter aimlessly.

    to idle along the avenue.

  3. (of a machine, engine, or mechanism) to operate at a low speed, disengaged from the load.

verb (used with object)

idled, idling 
  1. to pass (time) doing nothing (often followed byaway ).

    to idle away the afternoon.

    Synonyms: waste
  2. to cause (a person) to be idle.

    The strike idled many workers.

  3. to cause (a machine, engine, or mechanism) to idle.

    I waited in the car while idling the engine.

noun

  1. the state or quality of being idle.

  2. the state of a machine, engine, or mechanism that is idling.

    a cold engine that stalls at idle.

idle

/ ˈaɪdəl /

adjective

  1. unemployed or unoccupied; inactive

  2. not operating or being used

  3. (of money) not being used to earn interest or dividends

  4. not wanting to work; lazy

  5. (usually prenominal) frivolous or trivial

    idle pleasures

  6. ineffective or powerless; fruitless; vain

  7. without basis; unfounded

“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

verb

  1. to waste or pass (time) fruitlessly or inactively

    he idled the hours away

  2. (intr) to loiter or move aimlessly

  3. (intr) (of a shaft, engine, etc) to turn without doing useful work

  4. Also (Brit): tick over(intr) (of an engine) to run at low speed with the transmission disengaged

  5. (tr) to cause to be inactive or unemployed

“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Other Word Forms

  • idleness noun
  • idly adverb
  • overidle adjective
  • overidleness noun
  • unidle adjective
  • unidling adjective
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Word History and Origins

Origin of idle1

First recorded before 900, and in 1915–20 idle for def. 12; Middle English, Old English īdel (adjective) “empty, trifling, vain, useless”; cognate with German eitel
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Word History and Origins

Origin of idle1

Old English īdel; compare Old High German ītal empty, vain
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Synonym Study

Idle, indolent, lazy, slothful apply to a person who is not active. To be idle is to be inactive or not working at a job. The word is sometimes derogatory, but not always, since one may be relaxing temporarily or may be idle through necessity: pleasantly idle on a vacation; to be idle because one is unemployed or because supplies are lacking. The indolent person is naturally disposed to avoid exertion: indolent and slow in movement; an indolent and contented fisherman. The lazy person is averse to exertion or work, and especially to continued application; the word is usually derogatory: too lazy to earn a living; incurably lazy. Slothful denotes a reprehensible unwillingness to carry one's share of the burden: so slothful as to be a burden on others. See loiter.
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Israel has accused international aid agencies like the UN of not picking up aid waiting at Gaza's border, pointing to the hundreds of trucks sitting idle.

From BBC

“At the right conditions, failing idle facilities can pose significant wildfire and safety risks,” PG&E wrote in its plan to remove the lines.

The cause is still under investigation, but Pizarro has said a leading theory is that an idle Edison transmission line, last used in 1971, somehow became reenergized and started the blaze.

It doesn't own any vehicles but manages them digitally, trying to ensure that trucks don't stand idle or return home empty.

From BBC

Despite my “talk to no one” intention on this idle Wednesday, I found myself distracted by a man sitting at the edge of the bar across from me, writing feverishly on a napkin.

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IDKidle character