drumly

English

Etymology

Compare droumy.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈdɹʌmli/
  • Rhymes: -ʌmli

Adjective

drumly (comparative drumlier or more drumly, superlative drumliest or most drumly)

  1. (obsolete, chiefly Scotland) turbid; muddy
    • 1887, James Inglis, chapter 15, in Our New Zealand Cousins:
      Now we cross the Arrow, swift as its name portends; roaring and foaming deep down in its drumly channel.
    • 1853, Theodore Winthrop, chapter 3, in The Canoe and the Saddle:
      But salmon may escape the coquettish charms of the trolling-hook, may safely run the gauntlet of the parallel canoes and their howling, tamanous-cap wearers; the spear, misguided in the drumly gleam, may glance harmless from scale-armed shoulders: still other perils await them.
    • 1786, Robert Burns, “Highland Mary”, in Songs and Ballads:
      Ye banks, and braes, and streams around

      The castle o’ Montgomery,

      Green be your woods, and fair your flowers,

      Your waters never drumlie!

References