fudgy
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English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]- Rhymes: -ʌdʒi
Adjective
[edit]fudgy (comparative fudgier, superlative fudgiest)
- Resembling fudge, as in flavor or texture.
- 2007 April 18, Melissa Clark, “Silky, Sweet and Tart, a Triple Threat”, in New York Times[1]:
- FOR cooks of a lemon-loving persuasion, a puckery citrus curd is the culinary analogue of a chocolate fanatic’s fudgy ganache.
- 1997, Lorrie Moore, People Like That Are the Only People Here:
- She twice let the Baby’s ears get fudgy with wax.
- (figuratively) Fuzzy, imprecise.
- 1993, Steven J. Wagner, Richard Wagner, Naturalism: A Critical Appraisal, page 72:
- The hundred years after Euler represented a period in which functions not satisfying his "official" constraints were frequently smuggled into mathematics through fudgy considerations involving infinite series expansions and the like.
- (archaic) Irritable.
- (archaic) Awkward.