Triviality vs Whimsy - What's the difference?
triviality | whimsy | Related terms |
The quality of being trivial or unimportant.
Something which is trivial or unimportant.
* 1908:
A quaint and fanciful idea. A whim. Playfully odd behaviour.
* {{quote-news
, year=2012
, date=May 27
, author=Nathan Rabin
, title=TV: Review: THE SIMPSONS (CLASSIC): “New Kid On The Block” (season 4, episode 8; originally aired 11/12/1992)
, work=The Onion AV Club
An impulsive, illogical or capricious character.
(mining) A whim.
To fill with whimsies or whims; to make fantastic; to craze.
* J. Fletcher
Triviality is a related term of whimsy.
As nouns the difference between triviality and whimsy
is that triviality is the quality of being trivial or unimportant while whimsy is a quaint and fanciful idea a whim playfully odd behaviour.As a verb whimsy is
to fill with whimsies or whims; to make fantastic; to craze.triviality
English
Noun
(trivialities)- I propose to devote the remainder of mine to it, and can only regret the wasted years that lie behind me, squandered in trivialities .
whimsy
English
Alternative forms
* whimseyNoun
(en-noun)- The whimsies of poets and painters. — Ray.
- Men's folly, whimsies , and inconstancy. — Swift.
- Mistaking the whimseys of a feverish brain for the calm revelation of truth. — Bancroft.
citation, page= , passage=It’s a lovely sequence cut too short because the show seems afraid to give itself over to romance and whimsy and wistfulness when it has wedgie jokes to deliver. }}
Verb
- To have a man's brain whimsied with his wealth.