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Meaning of Folly | Babel Free

Noun CEFR C2 Standard
ˈfɑli

Definitions

  1. Foolishness that results from a lack of foresight or lack of practicality.
  2. A clump of trees, particularly one on the crest of a hill (or sometimes on a stretch of open ground).
  3. Thoughtless action resulting in tragic consequence.
  4. A fanciful building built for purely ornamental reasons.

Equivalents

Български глу́пост
Esperanto malsagêco
Français folie sottise
Gaeilge amaidí díchiall
Galego folía
עברית איוולת סכל
Հայերեն հիմարություն
Íslenska kjánaskapur
日本語 愚行
Lingála libomá
Nederlands domheid dwaasheid follie folly stommiteit
Português bobeira
Română prostie
Українська безумство дур дурня

Examples

“It would be folly to walk all that way, knowing the shops are probably shut by now.”
“With the voices singing in our ears, saying That this was all folly.”
“The purchase of Alaska from Russia was termed Seward's folly.”
“Thames Water has become the latest object lesson in the predictable and predicted folly of privatised monopolies, aided by a regulator that’s an even bigger wet wipe than the fatbergs bunging up the sewers.”
“A luncheonette in the shape of a coffee cup is particularly conspicuous, as is intended of an architectural duck or folly.”
““The Villa Straylight,” said a jeweled thing on the pedestal, in a voice like music, “is a body grown in upon itself, a Gothic folly. […]””
“It has been a long time since new follies were springing up across the great estates of Britain. But the owners of Doddington Hall, in Lincolnshire, have brought the folly into the 21st century, by building a 30ft pyramid in the grounds of the Elizabethan manor.”
“A great deal of eccentricity was expressed through the trend for ruin follies. But it wasn’t only the madness of paranoid earls and fashionable landowners that was encoded in them.”
“'Every hill seems to have a Folly' [...] 'I mean a clump of trees on the top.'”
“Folly Beach, the next island to the south (batik 3.7), bears the name given it by mariners, who looked for the island's tree-crested dune ridge, a volley or folly of trees, as a navigation guide [...] Probably a lot of East Coast islands bore the temporary name of Folly Beach.”
“During the 1920s and 1930s, Folly Farms (above) [referencing a photograph of a farmhouse surrounded by large trees] was owned by Mrs. Samuel Pennington Rotan of Pennsylvania, who was involved in the effort to improve medical care for the indigent people around Ways Station. … Folly Farms was originally known as Myrtle Grove …”

CEFR level

C2
Mastery
This word is part of the CEFR C2 vocabulary — mastery level.
See all C2 English words →

See also

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