The difference between Merry and Muzzy

When used as nouns, merry means an english wild cherry, whereas muzzy means a muslim.

When used as adjectives, merry means jolly and full of high spirits, whereas muzzy means hazy, indistinct, blurred, unfocussed.


check bellow for the other definitions of Merry and Muzzy

  1. Merry as an adjective:

    Jolly and full of high spirits.

    Examples:

    "We had a very merry Christmas."

  2. Merry as an adjective:

    Festive and full of fun and laughter.

    Examples:

    "Everyone was merry at the party."

  3. Merry as an adjective:

    Brisk

    Examples:

    "The play moved along at a merry pace."

  4. Merry as an adjective:

    Causing laughter, mirth, gladness, or delight.

    Examples:

    "a merry jest"

  5. Merry as an adjective (euphemistic):

    drunk; tipsy

    Examples:

    "Some of us got a little merry at the office Christmas party."

  1. Merry as a noun:

    An English wild cherry.

  1. Muzzy as an adjective (dialect, northern England):

    Hazy, indistinct, blurred, unfocussed.

  2. Muzzy as an adjective:

    dazed; bewildered; tipsy

  1. Muzzy as a noun (slang, offensive):

    A Muslim.