fishnetty

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English

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Etymology

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From fishnet +‎ -y.

Adjective

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fishnetty (comparative more fishnetty, superlative most fishnetty)

  1. Made of fishnet.
    • 1964 October 16, Anne Batt Calling, “All Strung Up”, in Liverpool Echo and Evening Express, number 26,391, Liverpool, Merseyside, page 18:
      Fishnetty fabrics are being hauled in by the yard by out-for-a-catch designers.
    • 1967 March, “Khaki & What Wows It”, in Betsy Talbot Blackwell, editor, Mademoiselle, New York, N.Y.: The Condé Nast Publications Inc., →ISSN, page 136:
      Stemming the culottes, sand-colored fishnetty tights by Hudson Hosiery.
    • 1967 October 10, Nan Duskin, “close-up: legs”, in The Philadelphia Inquirer, volume 277, number 102, Philadelphia, Pa.: Triangle Publications, Inc., →ISSN, page 7:
      Used to be a bore to buy stockings. Now it’s fun! [] Choose shimmers. Flat mattes. Filmy sheers. Knee-high. Thigh-high. Tights. Opaques. Laces. Fishnetty ones.
    • 1994 January 2, James Quig, “Boys’ night out”, in The Gazette, Montreal, Que., page F 2, column 2:
      “I come for the music and the exercise,” said one woman who was wearing high boots and a terrific fishnetty kind of top.
    • 1995 January 3, Liz Brody, “Sweaty Encounters of an Aerobic Kind”, in Los Angeles Times, Los Angeles, Calif.: The Times Mirror Company, →ISSN, page E3, column 4:
      While everyone else is sartorially correct in leotards and leggings, she is busting out of something fishnetty that looks as if it came from the Pleasure Chest.
    • 1991 August 16, “Events”, in The Press Democrat, 134th year, number 299, Santa Rosa, Calif., →ISSN, page D8, column 4:
      At this showing of the cult film at midnight tonight, Indecent Exposure, the “official” live touring company, will appear simultaneously on stage, with props, in full-blown, tacky, fishnetty costume and make-up to enhance the cult experience.
    • 1999 August 14, Stephanie Bunbury, “A watcher in the shadows”, in The Age, Melbourne, Vic., →ISSN, Saturday Extra section, page 5, column 2:
      He also appears on the cover of Manchester Slingback. Twice. In leather queen gear on the front and rampant, fishnetty drag on the back.
    • 2002, Jean Ure, chapter 3, in Girls Are Groovy! (Girlfriends; 3), London: Orchard Books, Hachette Children’s Books, published 2008, →ISBN, page 53:
      I thought Frizz would be too shy, but she immediately pulled off the jeans and put on the suspender belt, and a pair of stockings that went with it – black and fishnetty.
    • 2011, Kilian Betlach, “Fourth First Day”, in We Are Almost Always on the Verge, San Francisco, Calif.: Mutiny Pressings, →ISBN, page 120:
      Today, when I’m sure it hit mid-80s in the city, Margot is wearing a knee-length black dress, fishnetty tights, and clunky shoes.
    • 2016, Heather Tucker, chapter 30, in The Clay Girl: A Novel, Toronto, Ont.: ECW Press, a misFit book, →ISBN, page 132:
      Yesterday she had on a black bra under a pink fishnetty thing.
  2. Resembling or characteristic of fishnet.
    • 1985, Gloria Vanderbilt, “Mrs. Vreeland and Camels and Rubies”, in Once Upon a Time: A True Story, New York, N.Y.: Alfred A. Knopf, →ISBN, pages 244–245:
      [] Mrs. Vreeland was wearing [] a cool black sheath of some cobwebby kind of material, sleeveless, and skimming over her body like a second skin. And the black of her hair was pulled into a black snood, fishnetty and smart as could be.
    • 1995 December 6, Janice Breen Burns, “Babble On”, in The Age, 142nd year, number 43,843, Melbourne, Vic., →ISSN, page 16, column 4:
      This week in far-flung Northern Hemispheric ports the state of some gels’ sartorial gorgeousness is being measured by the exotic nature (or not) of their lacy, meshy, sort of fishnetty tights.
    • 2016, Robert J[ason] Peterson, “Booker, Glenn”, in Omegaball, Los Angeles, Calif.: A California Coldblood Book, Rare Bird Books, →ISBN, page 30:
      Her pale blue-blues glare out from a fishnetty pattern of eyeshadow that raccoons up her face.