| 神秘内容 Loading...Word for the Wise	October 20, 2006 Broadcast  Topic: Dillydally No  dillydallying today: we are getting directly to the question of how dillydally made its way into our  lexicon. We’ve said it before and we’ll say it again: dillydally is a reduplication of dally. Reduplication is the term for "an often grammatically  functional repetition of a radical element or a part of it occurring usually at  the beginning of a word and often accompanied by a change of the radical vowel." (来源:EnglishCN.com)  To dally is to "act playfully" or " deal  lightly." To dally is also to " waste time; linger; or dawdle." This latter sense is the one  that gave us dillydally, meaning "to  waste time by loitering or delaying;  to dawdle." To dawdle is to spend time lackadaisically, that is, with a  carefree indifference  marked by halfhearted efforts. We won’t waste any time on the stories behind dawdle and dally (unknown, and none too interesting, respectively: dally comes from the Anglo-French dalier), but lackadaisical does have a doozy of a history. It comes from lackaday, a now-archaic term used to  express regret or deprecation that was itself a shortening and alteration of  the synonymous (and also-archaic) alack  the day. 		  | 
                
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