No, the word is a noun. Therefore, it does not have a past form.
It means:
1. An odd or fanciful notion
2. A capricious notion
3. Fantasy
4. Whim
1. Hindi –Vhismeet
2. Spanish – Capricho
3. French – Fantaisie
4. Mandarin – Yìxiǎngtiānkāi
1. At last, the whimsy of my soul is outmatched by the turn of events.
2. He danced there like the whimsy sunbeam of a shaken water below.
3. They bring a sense of whimsy and nostalgia.
4. He felt all the blood in him bound out of his heart to meet her whimsy.
5. The whimsy creatures we are matched to contrast with, shift as the very winds or feather-grasses in the wind.Some synonyms of the word are:
playfulness, fancifulness, whimsically, caprice, fancy, idea, impulse, notion, whim, thought, vagary, quirk, imagination, crotchet, arbitrariness, fantasia, maggot etc.
What are some antonyms of the word of the day?
Some antonyms of the word are:
seriousness, strategy, expectedness, fact, existence, actuality, realism, realness, truth, macrocosm, inexorability
Quotation:
There can be many reasons to travel, but wandering into the world for no particular reason is a sublime madness, which in all its whimsy and pointlessness may depict the story of life – and indeed could be a useful model to keep in mind, seeing as so much of life’s ambition comes unstuck or leads to nothing much at all.
Michael Leunig
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