gingery

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English

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Etymology

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From ginger +‎ -y.

Adjective

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gingery (comparative more gingery, superlative most gingery)

  1. Somewhat reddish or reddish-brown in colour (especially of hair or skin colouring).
    gingery hair / freckles; the gingery fur of a fox
    • 1852 March – 1853 September, Charles Dickens, “chapter 19”, in Bleak House, London: Bradbury and Evans, [], published 1853, →OCLC:
      The very learned gentleman [] has cooled the natural heat of his gingery complexion in pools and fountains of law []
    • 1898, Arthur Conan Doyle, “The Club-Footed Grocer”, in Round the Fire Stories[1], London: Smith, Elder & Co., published 1908, page 212:
      He was a small, thick man, with a great rounded, bald head and one thin border of gingery curls.
    • 1972, Norma Klein, chapter 7, in Mom, the Wolf Man and Me[2], New York: Avon, page 75:
      He had bright red hair, not just gingery like Andrew’s []
  2. Having reddish-brown hair. (of a person)
    • 1899, Joseph Conrad, chapter 2, in Heart of Darkness[3]:
      The red-haired pilgrim was beside himself with the thought that at least this poor Kurtz had been properly revenged. [] He positively danced, the bloodthirsty little gingery beggar.
  3. Having a flavour or aroma of the spice ginger; containing that spice.
    a gingery broth / stir-fry
    • 2005, Truman Capote, chapter 6, in Summer Crossing, New York: Random House:
      Nostalgic, gingery hints of Spanish geranium wafted in her mother’s room []
  4. (dated) Energetic, vigorous, lively, peppy, zippy.
    • 1909 March 29, Fred Tenney, “Giants Take Last Game from Dallas”, in New York Times[4]:
      The boys have made themselves very popular with the fans here, because a good, gingery gaffe is played all the time, regardless of the score.
    • 1911 August 19, Kentucky Irish American[5], Louisville, Kentucky:
      The recent showing of the locals has been a big disappointment to the fans, the team playing loosely, and the gingery coaching and hustling of Hulswitt has been the only redeeming feature.
    • 1912, P. R. Bennett, “Patience on a Throne” in Ducdame: A Book of Verses, London: Elliot Stock, p. 44,[6]
      The man who reads his history of any clime or age
      Finds characters of potentates disfiguring each page,
      So touchy and so gingery
      That every little injury
      Will send them flying off into a rage.
    • 1994, John Malcolm, chapter 18, in Hung Over[7], New York: St. Martin’s Press, page 130:
      The door to the street opened and Nobby himself came striding in, all gingery action and alertness, like an Airedale after a dustman.
  5. (US, dated) Ginger, inhibited, cautious.
    • 1857, Thomas Mayne Reid, chapter 93, in The War-Trail[8], New York: De Witt, page 455:
      I walked slowly, and with an assumed air of careless indifference. I counterfeited the Comanche walk—not that bold free port—the magnificent and inimitable stride, so characteristic of Chippewa and Shawano, of Huron and Iroquois—but the shuffling gingery step of an English jockey; for such in reality is the gait of the Comanche Indian when afoot.
    • 1919, H. L. Mencken, “George Ade”, in Prejudices: First Series[9], NY: Knopf, page 115:
      They are unanimously shy of Ade in their horn-books for sophomores, and they are gingery in their praise of him in their innumerable review articles.

Anagrams

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