slovo | definícia |
stodgy (mass) | stodgy
- ťažký |
stodgy (encz) | stodgy,nestravitelný adj: Zdeněk Brož |
stodgy (encz) | stodgy,nudný adj: Zdeněk Brož |
stodgy (encz) | stodgy,těžko stravitelný Zdeněk Brož |
stodgy (encz) | stodgy,těžký adj: Zdeněk Brož |
Stodgy (gcide) | Stodgy \Stodg"y\, a.
Wet. [Prov. Eng.] --G. Eliot.
[1913 Webster] Stoechiology |
stodgy (wn) | stodgy
adj 1: heavy and starchy and hard to digest; "stodgy food"; "a
stodgy pudding served up when everyone was already full"
2: (used pejoratively) out of fashion; old fashioned; "moss-
grown ideas about family life" [syn: fogyish, moss-grown,
mossy, stick-in-the-mud(p), stodgy]
3: excessively conventional and unimaginative and hence dull;
"why is the middle class so stodgy, so utterly without a
sense of humor?"; "a stodgy dinner party" [syn: stodgy,
stuffy] |
| podobné slovo | definícia |
fogyish mossgrown mossy stick-in-the-mudprenominal stodgy old-fashioned (gcide) | nonmodern \nonmodern\ adj.
1. not modern; of or characteristic of an earlier time.
Opposite of modern. [Narrower terms: antebellum;
{fogyish, mossgrown, mossy, stick-in-the-mud(prenominal),
stodgy old-fashioned}; medieval, mediaeval, gothic;
old-time, quaint; unmodernized; victorian;
old-fashioned, outmoded; old-world] Also See: old,
past.
[WordNet 1.5] |
Stodgy (gcide) | Stodgy \Stodg"y\, a.
Wet. [Prov. Eng.] --G. Eliot.
[1913 Webster] Stoechiology |
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