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sobby. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
sobby, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
sobby in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
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English
Etymology
From sob + -y.
Adjective
sobby (comparative sobbier, superlative sobbiest)
- Very sad; inclined to sob (weep with convulsive gasps).
1903, George Horace Lorimer, Old Gorgon Graham:It began, 'Where is my wandering boy to-night?' and by the time she was through I was feeling so mushy and sobby that I put a five instead of a one into the plate by mistake.
1917, Sewell Ford, Wilt Thou Torchy:Every piece of furniture, from the threadbare sofa to the rickety center table, seems kind of sad and sobby.
- Resembling or characteristic of a sob.
a sobby sound
- (Can we verify(+) this sense?) That has been sobbed (soaked); dripping wet.
1882, Carlton McCarthy, Detailed Minutiae of Soldier life in the Army of Northern Virginia, 1861-1865:Nobody knows who he was; but no matter how wet the leaves, how sobby the twigs, no matter if there was no fire in a mile of the camp, that fellow could start one.
1887, Thomas Nelson Page, “No Haid Pawn”, in In Ole Virginia; Or, Marse Chan and Other Stories, New York, N.Y.: Charles Scribner's Sons, pages 180–181:The original building of the house, and its blood-stained foundation stones; the dead who had died of the pestilence that had raged afterward; the bodies carted by scores and buried in the sobby earth of the graveyard, whose trees loomed up through the broken window; […]
1902, Ellen Glasgow, The Battle Ground:The woman served him sullenly, placing some sobby biscuits and a piece of cold bacon on his plate, and pouring out a glass of buttermilk with a vicious thrust of the pitcher.
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