Associations to the word «Sidney»
Noun
- Judy
- Goodwin
- Subsidy
- Spencer
- Fisher
- Bucks
- Jared
- Brooke
- Gillespie
- Peterson
- Mt
- Macon
- Amy
- Pittsburgh
- Leslie
- Montgomery
- Poet
- Chivalry
- Bacon
- Kramer
- Barrie
- Sherlock
- Coleridge
- Campaigner
- Sloane
- Rollins
- Harold
- Northumberland
- Robert
- Spence
- Dyke
- Desmond
- Samuel
- Macarthur
- Nichols
- Hillary
- Louisa
- Bessie
- Authorship
- Reformer
- Pseudonym
- Thriller
- Barrister
- Lee
- Fremont
- Wyatt
- Mccall
- Douglass
- Rankin
- Stevenson
- Stab
- Norma
- Married
- Fitzgerald
- Mcintyre
- Abbott
- Riley
- Statesman
- Lucille
- Kahn
- Miniseries
- William
- Willoughby
- Landau
- Almond
- Clarinet
- Drummond
- Jill
- Virgil
- Astor
- Downing
- Nelson
- Irwin
- Leary
- Patti
- Bergman
- Hartman
- Oscar
- Siege
- Carroll
- Tracy
- Brett
- George
- Parsons
- Anthropologist
- Ingrid
- Mayer
- Carlyle
- Philanthropist
- Rees
- Despatch
- Sheridan
- Maynard
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
Speak clearly, if you speak at all; carve every word before
you let it fall.