The difference between Dodgy and Iffy
When used as adjectives, dodgy means evasive and shifty, whereas iffy means of dubious authenticity, legitimacy or legality.
check bellow for the other definitions of Dodgy and Iffy
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Dodgy as an adjective (UK, Australian, NZ):
evasive and shifty
Examples:
"Asked why, a spokesman gave a dodgy answer about legal ramifications."
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Dodgy as an adjective (UK, Australian, NZ):
unsound and unreliable
Examples:
"Never listen to dodgy advice."
"The dodgy old machine kept breaking down."
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Dodgy as an adjective:
dishonest
Examples:
"The more money the better, because there is always that dodgy politician or corrupt official to bribe."
"I am sure you wouldn't want to be seen buying dodgy gear, would you? (stolen goods)."
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Dodgy as an adjective:
risky
Examples:
"This is a slightly dodgy plan, because there is a lot that is being changed for this fix."
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Dodgy as an adjective:
deviant
Examples:
"He's a dodgy Peeping Tom."
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Dodgy as an adjective:
uncomfortable and weird
Examples:
"The situation was right dodgy."
"I'm feeling dodgy today, probably got the flu."
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Iffy as an adjective (slang):
Of dubious authenticity, legitimacy or legality.
Examples:
"He's selling new CD players for £20 each – that sounds a bit iffy to me."
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Iffy as an adjective:
Uncertain or chancy.
Examples:
"The weather is still iffy for Saturday's shuttle launch."