fellifluous
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Latin fellifluus, from fel (“gall”) + fluere (“to flow”).
Adjective
[edit]fellifluous (comparative more fellifluous, superlative most fellifluous)
- (uncommon) Full of bile or gall; audacious.
- 1795, Paul Henri Thiry Holbach, translated by William Hodgson, The System of Nature: Or, The Laws of the Moral and Physical World:
- Truth never reveals itself either to the enthusiast smitten with his own reveries; to the fellifluous fanatic enslaved by his prejudices; to the vain glorious mortal puffed up with his own presumptuous ignorance […]
- 1950 [5th century CE], Caelius Aurelianus, translated by I. E. Drabkin, On Acute Diseases and On Chronic Diseases, page 417:
- The disease of cholera, according to some, derives its name from the flow of bile that takes place from mouth and bowels, cholera being, so to speak, ‘the fellifluous disease.’
- 2007, Dannie Abse, The Presence, →ISBN, page 150:
- Behind a counter two young women, both evidently Asian, served a queue including a tipsy fellifluous Irishman.
Further reading
[edit]- “fellifluous”, in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: G. & C. Merriam, 1913, →OCLC.