drossy
English
Adjective
drossy (comparative drossier or more drossy, superlative drossiest or most drossy)
- worthless
- 1602 : William Shakespeare, Hamlet, act V scene 2
- Thus has he, and many more of the same breed that I
- know the drossy age dotes on, only got the tune of the
- time and, out of an habit of encounter, a kind of
- yeasty collection, which carries them through and
- through the most profane and winnowed opinions
- 1685, Matthew Prior, “A Satyr on the modern Translators”, in H. Bunker Wright, Monroe K. Spears, editors, The Literary Works of Matthew Prior, volume I, Second edition, Oxford: Clarendon Press, published 1971, page 23:
- They found the Mass, ’tis true, but in their Mould
They purg’d the drossy Oar to current Gold:
Mending their patttern, they escap’d the Curse,
Yet had they not writ better, they’d writ worse.
- 1602 : William Shakespeare, Hamlet, act V scene 2
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