- Home
- Idioms
- make nothing of
make nothing of
make nothing of something
to ignore something as if it had not happened; to think no more about something. (Often with it.) My father caught me throwing the snowball, but he made nothing of it. I made nothing of the remark, even though it seemed quite rude. I saw him leave early, but I made nothing of it.
make nothing of
1. Regard as unimportant, make light of, as in He made nothing of walking three miles to buy a newspaper. This expression was first recorded in 1632.
2. can make nothing of. Fail to accomplish, understand, or solve something, as in I could make nothing of that long speech. [Late 1600s]
Common Names:
| Name | Gender | Pronounced | Usage |
| Wide | | WEE-də | Frisian |
| Alim | | - | Arabic, Uyghur |
| Virginia | | vər-JIN-yə (English), veer-JEE-nyah (Italian), beer-KHEE-nyah (Spanish) | English, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Swedish, Romanian, Ancient Roman |
| Steiner | | ['stainə] | |
| Cary | | KER-ee | English |
| Adelyn | | AD-ə-lin | English (Modern) |