ferny
English
Adjective
ferny (comparative fernier, superlative ferniest)
- Of, or pertaining to ferns. (The addition of quotations indicative of this usage is being sought):
- Resembling or characteristic of a fern, in appearance, smell, etc.
- 1942, Emily Carr, The Book of Small, “Time,”
- All kinds of mosses grew by the stream—tufty, flat, ferny, and curly, green, yellow and a whitish kind that was tipped with scarlet sealing wax.
- 1954, William Golding, Lord of the Flies, London: Faber & Faber, Chapter One,
- Ralph had stopped smiling and was pointing into the lagoon. Something creamy lay among the ferny weeds.
- 1942, Emily Carr, The Book of Small, “Time,”
- Covered in or filled with ferns; flanked or surrounded by ferns.
- 1922, Katherine Mansfield, “At the Bay” in The Collected Stories of Katherine Mansfield, Penguin, 2007,
- And from the bush there came the sound of little streams flowing, quickly, lightly, slipping between the smooth stones, gushing into ferny basins and out again; and there was the splashing of big drops on large leaves […]
- 1928, Virginia Woolf, chapter 1, in Orlando: A Biography:
- He skirted all stables, kennels, breweries, carpenters' shops, washhouses, places where they make tallow candles, kill oxen, forge horse-shoes, stitch jerkins—for the house was a town ringing with men at work at their various crafts—and gained the ferny path leading uphill through the park unseen.
- 1939, Lucy Maud Montgomery, chapter 1, in Anne of Ingleside:
- We'll walk over the spring fields and through those ferny old woods.
- 1922, Katherine Mansfield, “At the Bay” in The Collected Stories of Katherine Mansfield, Penguin, 2007,
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