Sundayfied
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Adjective
[edit]Sundayfied (comparative more Sundayfied, superlative most Sundayfied)
- Made suitable for a Sunday.
- 1854, The Jubilee Harbinger for 1854:
- The omnibusses, though working, poor vehicles! look spruce and "Sundayfied." The horses have bunches of ribbons in their ears, and the coachmen carry pinks or dog-roses in their button-holes, or in their mouths.
- 1879, Sunday Afternoon, volume 3, page 253:
- Every now and then was a distribution of new singing books, bearing fantastical names and filled with "modern music," which for the most part were rollicking melodies, as if Offenbach's jingles had been Sundayfied.
- 1921, John Galsworthy, To Let:
- All was still and Sundayfied; the lilacs in full flower scented the air.