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  2. Oct 27, 2018 · The meaning "cap-shaped piece of copper lined with gunpowder and used to ignite a firearm" is by 1825, hence cap-gun (1855); extended to paper strips used in toy pistols by 1872 (cap-pistol is from 1879).

    • Madagascar

      nocturnal Madagascar mammal, 1795, given this sense by...

    • Maddish

      adjectival word-forming element, Old English -isc "of the...

    • Madden

      late 13c., "disordered in intellect, demented, crazy,...

    • Madding

      madding. (adj.) "becoming mad, acting madly, raging,...

  3. The earliest known use of the word madcap is in the late 1500s. OED's earliest evidence for madcap is from 1589, in the writing of Robert Greene, writer and playwright. madcap is formed within English, by compounding. Etymons: mad adj., cap n.1. See etymology.

  4. Therefore, 'madcap' essentially means 'crazy whim' or 'impulsive madness,' describing individuals or actions characterized by their tendency to engage in wild, unpredictable, and often daring or reckless behavior.

  5. used to describe silly and funny behaviour or a plan that is very silly and funny and unlikely to succeed: the madcap antics of the clowns. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases.

  6. The meaning of MADCAP is marked by capriciousness, recklessness, or foolishness. How to use madcap in a sentence.

  7. MADCAP meaning: 1. used to describe silly and funny behaviour or a plan that is very silly and funny and unlikely…. Learn more.

  8. madcap. Madcap things are done in a foolish, rash, or impulsive way, without planning or thought. Your madcap adventure might include a spur-of-the-moment bus ride to a nearby city without enough money in your pocket to buy lunch.

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