glassy
English
Etymology
From Middle English glasy, equivalent to glass + -y. Compare Saterland Frisian glääsich (“glassy”), Dutch glazig (“glassy”), German Low German glasig (“glassy”), German glasig (“glassy”).
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /ˈɡlɑːsi/
Audio (Southern England): (file)
- Rhymes: -ɑːsi
- (US) IPA(key): /ˈɡlæsi/
- Rhymes: -æsi
Adjective
glassy (comparative glassier, superlative glassiest)
- Of or like glass, especially in being smooth and somewhat reflective.
- (sailing, surfing, of water, not comparable) Lacking any chop; smooth and mostly flat.
- a fair day on a glassy sea
- 1966, Bruce Brown, director, The Endless Summer:
- It was blowing about 15 knots, which is considered fairly glassy for the west Coast.
- (sailing, surfing, of water, not comparable) Lacking any chop; smooth and mostly flat.
- Including a lot of glass.
- Extensively glazed.
- architecture enamored of glass and steel, where glassier meant classier
- 2023 January 12, Tim Starks, with Aaron Schaffer, “Don't panic. It might not be a cyberattack. The Cybersecurity 202 newsletter.”, in Washington Post[1], retrieved 12 January 2023:
- Every time there's a major technological outage, […] speculation quickly erupts blaming a possible cyberattack. […] mostly, the sentiment of cyber observers is that it's a bad idea to jump to conclusions, especially publicly. ¶ "If we keep crying wolf, then we lose the ability to educate and solve real problems," Bryson Bort, founder of the cybersecurity company Scythe, told me. "We live in the glassiest house in the world with our reliance on information systems."
- Extensively glazed.
- (of eyes) Dull; expressionless; lifeless.
- Coordinate term: fisheye
- the glassy eyes of a person in a trance
Derived terms
Translations
of or like glass
|
dull, expressionless
|
Noun
glassy (plural glassies)
- A glass marble.
- 1915, D. H. Lawrence, The Rainbow, Vintage, published 2011, page 198:
- Then suddenly she ceased to hear, having caught sight of a glassie rolled into a corner.