foodful
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈfuːdfəl/
- (General American) IPA(key): /ˈfudfəl/
- Hyphenation: food‧ful
Adjective
[edit]foodful (comparative more foodful, superlative most foodful)
- (dated) Supplying food.
- 1715, Homer, translated by Alexander Pope, “Book II”, in The Iliad of Homer, volume I, London: […] W[illiam] Bowyer, for Bernard Lintott […], →OCLC, page 31, lines 657–660:
- […] Athens the fair, where great Erectheus ſway'd, / That ow'd his Nurture to the blue-ey'd Maid, / But from the teeming Furrow took his Birth, / The mighty Offspring of the foodful Earth.
- 1791 August 3, [Edmund Burke], An Appeal from the New to the Old Whigs, […], London: […] J[ames] Dodsley, […], →OCLC, page 120:
- The democratick commonwealth is the foodfull nurſe of ambition. […] Whenever, in ſtates which have had a democratick baſis, they have endeavoured to put reſtraints upon ambition, their methods were as violent, as in the end they were ineffectual; as violent indeed as any the moſt jealous deſpotiſm could invent.
- 1791–1792 (published 1793), William Wordsworth, “Extracts from Descriptive Sketches Taken during a Pedestrian Tour in the Alps”, in Poems […], volume I, London: […] Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, […], published 1815, →OCLC, pages 78–79:
- Mid stormy vapours ever driving by, / Where ospreys, cormorants, and herons cry; / Where hardly given the hopeless waste to cheer, / Denied the bread of life the foodful ear, / Dwindles the pear on autumn's latest spray, / And apple sickens pale in summer's ray; […]
- 1903, Mary Hunter Austin, The Land of Little Rain[2]:
- It seems that most seeds are foodful in the arid regions, most berries edible, and many shrubs good for firewood with the sap in them.