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Definition 2024


Lolly

Lolly

See also: lolly

English

Proper noun

Lolly

  1. A diminutive of the female given name Louise.
    • 1982, Dorothea Straus, Under the Canopy, page 50,
      Louise Bergeret (Lolly) was a year older than Enid; [] .
    • 1991, Gene Stratton-Porter, The Keeper of the Bees, page 481,
      He could see it all, with that certificate before him reading “Alice Louise Cameron” — Lolly.
    • 2010, Harry Hughes, Horseshoes, unnumbered page,
      Lolly, huh? Short for Louise no doubt.”

lolly

lolly

See also: Lolly

English

Noun

lolly (plural lollies)

  1. A piece of hard candy on a stick; a lollipop.
    • 2004, Nigella Lawson, Feast: Food that Celebrates Life, unnumbered page,
      Trim the lolly sticks, so that you have a stem of about 3–4cm to stick into the cake, and then plunge the sticks of the foreshortened lollies into the cake so that the ghoulish faces leer out from their black-frosted graveyard.
  2. (Britain, slang, uncountable) Money.
  3. (Australia, New Zealand) Any confection made from sugar, or high in sugar content; a sweet, a piece of candy.
    • 1924, Frank George Carpenter, Australia, New Zealand and Some Islands of the South Seas, page 36,
      Leaving the Domain, I walked back to the hotel, noticing the queer signs by the way. One was “Lollies for Sale.” It was over the door of a confectioner′s store where all sorts of candies were displayed.
    • 2002, R.I.C. Publications, Primary Science, page 52,
      Organise the students into small groups. Send a letter home to the parents stating that the science lesson will involve students eating a small amount of lollies. Check which students are allowed to eat lollies. Students with diabetes will only be able to observe or they could bring their own ‘special’ sweets from home.
    • 2008, Markus Zusak, The Book Thief, unnumbered page,
      He looked straight into Frau Diller′s spectacled eyes and said, ‘Mixed lollies, please.’
      Frau Diller smiled. [] ‘Here,’ she said, tossing a single lolly onto the counter. ‘Mix it yourself.’

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