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Midget   /mˈɪdʒət/   Listen
noun
Midget  n.  
1.
(Zool.) A minute bloodsucking fly. (Local, U. S.)
2.
A very diminutive person having normal proportions of the body parts; compare dwarf.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Midget" Quotes from Famous Books



... Bootstrap to install pilot gyros in the Platform he hadn't bargained for sabotage or murder or love. But Joe learned that ruthless agents were determined to wreck the project. He found that the beautiful girl he loved, and men like The Chief, a rugged Indian steelworker, and Mike, a midget who made up for his size by brains, would have to fight with their bare hands to make man's age old dream of space ...
— Space Platform • Murray Leinster

... was a printing press; and when Orville was fifteen years of age, they were publishing a four-page paper called the Midget. They did all the work from editor to ...
— Modern Americans - A Biographical School Reader for the Upper Grades • Chester Sanford

... So Midget had bought a lovely pattern of brocaded silk for the outside, and a dainty pale green satin for the lining. She had seamed up the two materials separately, and then had joined them at the top, thinking that when she turned ...
— Marjorie's New Friend • Carolyn Wells

... thinking it especially to-night—that it is horribly difficult. One's imagination seizes hold of trifles, and magnifies them and distorts them. From little things, little natural things, one deduces—I mean one takes a midget and makes of it a monster. How one ought to pray to see clear in people one loves! It's very strange, but I think that sometimes, just because one loves, one is ready to be afraid, to doubt, to exaggerate, to think ...
— The Call of the Blood • Robert Smythe Hichens

... painful character of the wound which they inflict. The "punkey," or "black-fly," as it is called, is a small, black gnat, about the size of a garden ant, and the bite of the insect often results very seriously. The midget is a minute little creature, and is the most everlastingly sticky and exasperating pest in the catalogue of human torments. They fly in swarms of thousands, and go for their victim "en masse" and the face, hands and neck are soon covered as if with "hay seed." ...
— Camp Life in the Woods and the Tricks of Trapping and Trap Making • William Hamilton Gibson


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