treey
English
Etymology
tree + -y
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈtɹi.i/
Adjective
treey (comparative more treey, superlative most treey)
- Having many trees.
- 1912, P. A. Vaile, Horance G. Hutchinson, Henry Leach, chapter 35, in Essays on Golf:
- This is a tree-y course, like New Zealand, really good, good greens, well bunkered, a trifle on the short side, but full of interest.
- 1934, Lewis Grassic Gibbon, Grey Granite, →ISBN, page 118-119:
- But this night was a treey desolation, rain-pelted […] .
- 1983, Robert Kelly, Under Woods, →ISBN, page 25:
- Notices darker figure move
against dark treey background.
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Anagrams
- Tyree