Citations:wifty

Adjective: "eccentric, silly, scatterbrained"

 * 1994, Maxine Sheets-Johnstone, The Roots of Power: Animate Form and Gendered Bodies, Open Court (1994), ISBN 0812692578, page 331:
 * Female minds on the other hand are wifty, vague, jumbled, erratic — hence illogical and irrational.
 * 1998, Russ Barkhimer, "Who's Got the Right Time?", Xlibris (1998), ISBN 073885543X, page 290:
 * I'm also getting as wifty as any corny fictional character I ever read and ridiculed.”
 * 2004, Steven Rea, "Thanks for no memories", Philadelphia Inquirer, 19 March 2004:
 * Kirsten Dunst is utterly charming as the doctor's wifty office assistant, idolizing her boss from afar and sharing tokes and beer with a pair of Lacuna lab techies played by Mark Ruffalo and Elijah Wood.
 * 2009, Emily Listfield, Best Intentions, Atria Books (2009), ISBN 9781416576716, page 79:
 * Jack, at nineteen, twenty, had an unambiguous understanding of what it meant to win, there was none of that theoretical, wifty new-age stuff for him;
 * 2012, Edna G. Frankel, The Circle of Grace: Frequency and Physicality, Light Technology Publishing (2012), ISBN 189182418X, page 49:
 * They may seem wifty and ungrounded, but in reality, they are functioning at a higher level, receiving stimuli from more than just the third dimension.
 * 2012, Cheryl Glenn, The Harbrace Guide to Writing, Wadsworth (2012), ISBN 9780495913993, page 57:
 * Sometimes when he talks about this, it sounds as ordinary and hard-boiled as a real estate appraisal; other times it can sound fantastical and wifty and achingly naïve, informed by the last inklings of childhood