English
Etymology
From un- + fancy.
Adjective
unfancy (comparative more unfancy, superlative most unfancy)
- Not fancy; simple
2009 January 23, Holland Cotter, “Where Lines Become a Kind of Language”, in New York Times[1]:Physically, the piece is slight: an odd-shaped, four-inch-across scrap of blue paper marked with unfancy parallel ink strokes and white highlights.