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woolly-headed

American  
[wool-ee-hed-id] / ˈwʊl iˈhɛd ɪd /

adjective

  1. having hair of a woolly texture or appearance.

  2. marked by fuzzy thinking; muddleheaded; dim-witted.


Other Word Forms

  • woolly-headedness noun

Etymology

Origin of woolly-headed

First recorded in 1640–50

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

And at Yale Repertory Theater you can see the premiere of “Imogen Says Nothing,” by Aditi Brennan Kapil, an ambitious but rather woolly-headed play featuring, among other oddities, a troupe of talking bears.

From New York Times • Jan. 30, 2017

Despite the beauty of the law’s language, the Wilderness Act wasn’t conceived by woolly-headed nature fantasists.

From Slate • Aug. 29, 2014

Those people who believe that scholars are a woolly-headed tribe, hardly to be trusted with a dollar, are right.

From Time Magazine Archive

Charles enjoys metaphysical speculation and would fit nicely into an Iris Murdoch novel as a member of her slightly woolly-headed intelligentsia.

From Time Magazine Archive

Instead, he was “a 36-year-old unshaven woolly-headed Guardsman in wrinkled flight suit and scuffed boots” facing “a cadre of handsome, young Marine officers—the President’s elite fliers: close-cropped, fresh-shaved, immaculate in tailored flight suits, spit-shined boots.”

From "Mountain of Fire" by Rebecca E. F. Barone