Word
Of
The
Day
oaf
oaf \OHF\
noun
Oaf is used to refer to someone as big, clumsy, and slow-witted.
// The main character starts the movie as a tactless, bumbling
oaf who is constantly causing offense to everyone around them, but eventually learns a valuable lesson about kindness and courtesy.
See the entry >
Examples:
“Let me give you a rose. Well, just an imaginary rose. ‘What?’ ‘What’s the occasion?’ ‘What for?’ Because I want to participate in an act of kindness. ... It’s impossible, even for a blustering, clumsy
oaf like me, to ignore the positive effects of a rose in hand.” — Anthony Campbell,
The Advertiser-Gleam (Guntersville, Alabama), 24 Oct. 2025
Did you know?
In long-ago England, it was believed that elves sometimes secretly exchanged their babies for human babies—a belief that served as an explanation when parents found themselves with a baby that failed to meet expectations or desires: these parents believed that their real baby had been stolen by elves and that a
changeling had been left in its place. The label for such a child was
auf, or
alfe, (meaning “an elf’s or a goblin’s child”), which was later altered to form our present-day
oaf.
Auf is likely from the Middle English
alven or
elven, meaning “
elf” or “
fairy.” Today, the word
oaf is no longer associated with babies and is instead applied to anyone who appears especially unintelligent or graceless.