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Ninny vs Nonny - What's the difference?

ninny | nonny |

As nouns the difference between ninny and nonny

is that ninny is a silly or foolish person while nonny is a fool.

As an interjection nonny is

A meaningless word used in refrains, especially in old English ballads and glees.|lang=en

ninny

English

Noun

(ninnies)
  • a silly or foolish person
  • * {{quote-book
  • , year=1607 , author=John Marston , title=What you will , chapter=Act 5, Scene 1 citation , page=three of sheet G3 , passage=Byd.'' ...a good cheeke, an inticing eye, a smooth skinne, a well shapt leg, a faire hand, you cannot bring a wench into a fooles parradize for you?
    ''Sim.
    Not I by this garter, I am a foole, a very Ninny I, how call you her? how call you her? }}
  • * "Ninny — that soft, smiling, self-effacing, apologetic fellow, the type who is terribly sorry when you happen to step on his foot, the kind you can borrow money from in the certainty he will never demand you repay it." — (1962)
  • nonny

    English

    Noun

    (nonnies)
  • (obsolete) A fool.
  • Interjection

    (en-intj)
  • * 1599 ,
  • *:Then sigh not so,
  • *:But let them go,
  • *:And be you blithe and bonny,
  • *:Converting all your sounds of woe
  • *:Into Hey nonny', ' nonny .