cobwebby
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Adjective
[edit]cobwebby (comparative cobwebbier, superlative cobwebbiest)
- Having many cobwebs.
- 1944, Emily Carr, “Attic Eagles”, in The House of All Sorts[1]:
- Off this landing and over the studio was a dark cobwebby place, tangled with wiring, plumbing, ventilation and mystery.
- Resembling a cobweb or cobwebs.
- 1980, Carl Sagan, chapter VI, in Cosmos, Random House, published 2002:
- […] wonderful images of […] the cobwebby features of Ganymede […]
- (figurative) Old or dated.
- 2014 August 22, Private Eye, number 1373, page 15:
- As for changing the TV landscape, almost every programme it screened from 8pm until the early hours in the week beginning 11 August was either a repeat of one of its original transmissions or a re-run of cobwebby sitcoms and dramas it has bought from established terrestrial networks.
Synonyms
[edit]- (having many cobwebs): cobwebbed
- (resembling a cobweb): spider-webby
- (old, dated): aged, cobwebbed, hoary; see also Thesaurus:old or Thesaurus:obsolete