insignificant+person

  • 101zilch — (Roget s Thesaurus II) noun 1. Slang. No thing; not anything: nil, nothing, null. Informal: zero. Slang: nix. Archaic: aught. See ABSENCE. 2. Slang. A totally insignificant person: cipher, nebbish, nobody, nonentity, nothing. Informal: pip squeak …

    English dictionary for students

  • 102pissant — 1661, an ant, from first element of PISMIRE (Cf. pismire) (q.v.) + ANT (Cf. ant). Meaning contemptible, insignificant person is from 1903 …

    Etymology dictionary

  • 103smidgen — 1845, perhaps from Scot. smitch very small amount, small insignificant person (1822), perhaps from smidin small syllable …

    Etymology dictionary

  • 104zilch — (n.) nothing, 1966, from earlier sense of meaningless speech (1960), originally Mr. Zilch (1931), comic character in the magazine Ballyhoo. Perhaps from U.S. college slang (early 1900s) Joe Zilsch an insignificant person. Probably a nonsense… …

    Etymology dictionary

  • 105maggot — n 1. a despicable, dirty and/or insignificant person. In British use, the predominant idea is usually beneath contempt , whereas in Australia maggot is a general ised term of abuse. 2. British money. A rare usage, heard among petty criminals or… …

    Contemporary slang

  • 106no-mark — n British an insignificant person, a nobody . An item of Merseyside slang popularised by the TV soap opera Brookside …

    Contemporary slang

  • 107gone man — goner, man as good as dead, insignificant person …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 108minimi — n. very small creature; insignificant person; (Anatomy) little finger or toe …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 109minimus — n. very small creature; insignificant person; (Anatomy) little finger or toe …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 110pionek — Człowiek mało znaczący, nieliczący się Eng. An inconsequential or insignificant person …

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