Country Dictionary

A fork of Rural Dictionary

stymied

Thwarted, beaten in something you were trying to achieve in.

Hitler was eventually stymied.

by Random Task June 14, 2007

stymie

block, hinder, frustrate

you stymie me you @#$%er

by Anonymous November 04, 2003

stymie

The character name of one of the "Little Rascals", a black boy who starred along with Buckwheat. He was black, so they gave him a name associated with his shade of skin color, what you'd probably see if you were blind.
Stymie is Scottish for "blind man.", in particular, one with white eyes like cataracts, thus what they'd call one golf ball blocking another golf ball on the golf green. It really could, with some imagination, look like a man with cataracts.

Eddie Murphy got his start making stand-up jokes about all the names given the Little Rascals, particularly Stymie.

by skydog70 May 19, 2007

stymied

adj. The act of being highly inebriated. Typically used when the person is intoxicated with alcohol as opposed to other drugs. Commonly used in the Bedford Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn, NY during the late 80's

Man, I didn't know what I was doing last night. Drank too many forties, I was stymied!

That bum is always stymied.

by William Genao October 16, 2004

stymie

A mix between STINKY and SLIMY.

A) wow, that girl looks all stymie.

B) That big old gorilla bitch touched my arm, now i feel all stymie

by Hector_Gone_Bad October 22, 2007

stymie

aged to a funky smell. old. rotten. moldy. smelling of fungus.

that cheese has gotten stymie.
ooh, whats that stymie smell in here?
them underwear are stymie!

by Billy Bimbauminnim September 23, 2006

Stymie

Stymie (See also Stimy, stymying, stymieing)

Def 1: a word used by Scottish courts to describe the pro-rogueing of parliament prior to Brexit;

Def 2: a word used by Scottish judges to show they know words in the English language that the majority of English speaking nations have never heard before;

Def 3: a word which 99% of the English speaking world had to look up (on Google, or another search engine, or a dictionary) when they first heard it said aloud (see also pro-rogueing).

In use description 1: The Scottish courts have ruled that proroguing parliament was an unlawful act to Stymie the Brexit debate.

In use description 2: So, I heard the Scottish courts have said “pro-rogueing” parliament was to “Stymie” debate about “Brexit”, which is fine. However, can you please confirm: what “Stymie” means; what “proroguing” means; and what “Brexit” means?

by Red1273 February 11, 2025