Associations to the word «Sidney»
Noun
- Bancroft
- Myra
- Cbe
- Ellington
- Chan
- Yates
- Alderman
- Dorothy
- Katharine
- Obe
- Levant
- Wr
- Garner
- Prose
- Shirley
- Darlington
- Lionel
- Dyer
- Reginald
- Kaye
- Regina
- Jacobson
- Willard
- Ernest
- Lillian
- Shaw
- Raisin
- Kaplan
- Caine
- Franklin
- Stu
- Barnes
- Epitaph
- Cohen
- Earle
- Zion
- Gamble
- Flushing
- Pollock
- Romance
- Lew
- Alec
- Browne
- Wharton
- Frederic
- Nightingale
- Horace
- Clive
- Cary
- Essex
- Wilder
- Katz
- Sherman
- Clarence
- Kaufman
- Boyd
- Irving
- Oration
- Harmon
- Scream
- Cecil
- Rosenthal
- Russell
- Carmichael
- Neill
- Bess
- Freedman
- Granada
- Humphrey
- Playwright
- Edwin
- Esq
- Geraldine
- Aux
- Trumpeter
- Temp
- Municipal
- Newman
- Winters
- Walter
- Cromwell
- Rookie
- Armstrong
- Hawkins
- Carton
- Nebraska
- Horne
- Arthur
- Henry
- Counselor
- Wordsworth
- Apology
- Joanne
- Biographer
- Whig
- Charlie
Adjective
Verb
Wiktionary
SIDNEY, proper noun. A surname.
SIDNEY, proper noun. A male given name, transferred from the surname. Used since the 18th century; diminutive Sid.
SIDNEY, proper noun. A female given name, twentieth century usage, more often in the spelling Sydney.
Dictionary definition
SIDNEY, noun. English poet (1554-1586).
Wise words
The most important things are the hardest things to say.
They are the things you get ashamed of because words
diminish your feelings - words shrink things that seem
timeless when they are in your head to no more than living
size when they are brought out.