Boofhead vs Boofy - What's the difference?
boofhead | boofy | Related terms |
(Australia, slang, derogatory) Idiot.
* 2007 , Felice Arena, Garry Lyon, Specky Magee & the Spirit of the Game ,
* 2010 , Emily Maguire, Smoke in the Room ,
* 2010 , Cathryn Brunet, Three Over Par ,
(Australia, colloquial) Of hair, puffy, or having extra volume, not necessarily desired; having such hair; see bouffant.
* 2004 , Margaret Simons, Latham's World: The New Politics of the Outsiders ,
* 2005 , John Harms, The Pearl: Steve Renouf's Story ,
* 2010 , James Dack, Stephen Dack, Larry Writer, Sunshine and Shadow: A Brothers' Story ,
(en) (Australia, colloquial) Brawny, overtly masculine and rather dim-witted.
* 2006 , Judy Hardy-Holden, Love in the Afternoon ,
* 2011 , Dave Graney, 1001 Australian Nights: A Memoir ,
* 2011 , John Sullivan, Firebug ,
Boofhead is a related term of boofy.
As a noun boofhead
is (australia|slang|derogatory) idiot.As an adjective boofy is
(australia|colloquial) of hair, puffy, or having extra volume, not necessarily desired; having such hair; see bouffant or boofy can be (australia|colloquial) brawny, overtly masculine and rather dim-witted.boofhead
English
Noun
(en noun)unnumbered page,
- ‘Ah, if it isn?t the grunter and his boofhead mate, Biff,’ said Matt, standing between Specky and the two Sovereign Grove thugs.
page 2,
- ‘And he looks fit. Strong. I worry about you here alone. There are some real boofheads in this building.’
- ‘Harmless boofheads'. Anyway, I?m safer with ' boofheads down the hall than some religious nut-job muscle man in the flat with me.’
unnumbered page,
- “Stop it, you daft thing.” He draws me into a warm hug. “I might be a bit of a boofhead but I do understand.”
- My arms wrap tightly around him. “You?re not a boofhead . You?re a very nice man and I?m glad you?re my friend.”
References
boofy
English
Etymology 1
From bouffant.Adjective
(er)- My hair was so boofy this morning it took 10 minutes of brushing to get it looking decent.
page 38,
- He appeared in person much as he did on television – big, boofy even when well groomed – like a version of Ginger Meggs grown up and gone into politics.
page 81,
- Steve trotted onto the field: a young footballer with a boofy , 1980s haircut.
unnumbered page,
- I'm smiling, my tie is askew, and I'm sporting a boofy big hairdo, like all the other kids in my class.
Etymology 2
Possibly from or influenced by boofhead.(en)
Adjective
(er)- Dave, the big boofy''' builder, finally solved the mouse problem the big '''boofy bloke way: by crushing it unceremoniously under his boot.
page 58,
- My friend Sharn has a friend in her late 50s who is very keen to maintain sexual relations with her husband, a big boofy bloke, a mechanic by trade.
page 116,
- Suddenly the carriage was full of boofy schoolboys all excitedly chesting and punching each other and stretching their limbs as they tried to sit still.
page 72,
- She likes Doug Wright, believes behind the hard facade lives a warm, boofy bloke not unlike her Dave.