DILFy

English

Alternative forms

  • dilfy

Etymology

From DILF +‎ -y.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈdɪlfi/
  • Rhymes: -ɪlfi

Adjective

DILFy (comparative DILFier, superlative DILFiest)

  1. Being, resembling, or befitting a DILF.
    • 2007, Mary H.K. Choi, “Alec Baldwin...Dude, he’s a Baldwin”, in Missbehave, number 3, page 26:
      Then his megalomaniacal role as surgeon Dr. Jed Hill in Malice clinched my sexual servitude. As DILFy as mere mortals are, nothing fulfills me more than being filled up by a dude with a God Complex.
    • 2021, Rachel Ember, “Lance” (chapter 10), in Signs of Spring[1], Chestnut Press:
      She scoffs. “You're such a little shit! But I forgive you because you're having such a Dickensian moment in life right now. Penniless and swept off your feet by a DILFy cowboy, all in the same day.”
    • 2021, Vera Kurian, Never Saw Me Coming[2], Random House:
      A door opened and a man came in, smiling in a subdued but friendly way. “Hi there, I’m Detective Bentley,” he said. Detective Bentley was DILFy in a Die Hard sort of way—I liked him right away. “I’ve been working this case for the past few months. Do you mind if I ask you a few questions?”