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mellowy. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
mellowy, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
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English
Etymology
From Middle English melowy, equivalent to mellow + -y.
Adjective
mellowy (comparative more mellowy, superlative most mellowy)
- Soft; unctuous; loamy.
1812, Great Britain. Board of Agriculture, Agricultural Surveys: Banff, page 68:The first a dry mellowy soil, made up of a due mixture of clay and sand, very deep, and passes under the name of daichy haughs.
- Mild; subdued; gentle; not at all harsh or sharp.
mellowy light
1856 February 23, “Poetical Nuisances”, in The Saturday Review of Politics, Literature, Science and Art, page 328:Like a stream-wrestling lily of mellowy gold, What sweet parted lips, and what glozy blue eyes, Purple-steeped as the heartsease held up to the light!
1887, R. M. Tate ·, Michael Malcolm, Or, Annals of a Sea-port Town, page 186:A little distance off was a grey and mossy cottage, the sight of which made Michael's heart leap, and called to his memory many reflections, pleasing, but mellowy sad.
1968 August 5, “Philippine Trade Standared Specifications for Fish Sauce”, in Official Gazette, volume 64, number 32, page 8108:The fish sauce shall have a mellowy taste and should not be too salty.
1829, T.C.O., “To S****”, in Ladies' Magazine and Literary Gazette, volume 2, page 35:The silver moon—the silver moon—how mellowy it gleams!
1841, Jules Fournet, Clinical Researches on Auscultation of the Respiratory Organs and on the First Stage of Phthisis Pulmonalis, page 58:I have investigated with great care the alterations of the soft, free, mellowy character of the normal respiratory murmurs, in all the cases of auscultation I have met for some years, and I have learned to give to this class of signs more weight than is usually assigned to them.
1928, Country Life - Volume 55, page 127:Get the fun of "playing" outdoors in the mellowy energising winter sunshine.
- Tender; emotional.
2004, Charles Fleming, The Ivory Coast:Anita saw that look on him, that mellowy, kind of stupid look that some men get when they've been drinking.
2016, Marilyn Pappano, A Summer to Remember:Not that he got all soft and mellowy around them, but he'd never met one he didn't like.
- (of plants) Mature and soft; ripe.
1769, John Ogilvie, Providence. Solitude. Paradise. An aeolian ode, page 29:Round its sides, A range of Gardens, gay as those which crown'd Thy work Semiramis, luxuriant waved With Autumn's mellowy growth;
1839, Margaret Richardson, The Buds of Hope: A Collection of Miscellaneous Poems, page 48:Autumn's rich mellowy fruit bedecks the trees, Laid low, beneath a winter's stormy skies.
1886 January 9, W. Ingram, “Fruit Garden: Amateur Pear Growers”, in The Garden, volume 29, page 22:The first named never becomes a mellowy Pear, even grown on a south wall here ;