Definition of Hayey

1. resembling hay [adj]

Lexicographical Neighbors of Hayey

haybox
hayboxes
haycation
haycations
haycock
haycockite
haycocks
hayduck
hayducks
hayduk
hayduks
haye
hayed
hayer
hayers
hayey (current term)
hayfever
hayfield
hayfields
hayfork
hayforks
haying
haying time
hayings
haylage
haylages
hayle
hayles
haylift
haylifts

Literary usage of Hayey

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Appletons' Annual Cyclopædia and Register of Important Events of the Year (1884)
"In the Niagara bridge, designed by CC Schneider and Edmund hayey, the abutting banks are made uso of to attach the shore ends to a mass of ..."

2. A Treatise on the Law of Telegraph and Telephone Companies by Sidney Walter Jones (1906)
"... telephone companies have a right to decide how their work "hayey v. Mich. Tel. Co., 124 Mich. 66 NJL 41, 48 Atl. 993; Postal Tel. 607, 83 NW 600. ..."

3. The Canadian Monthly and National Review by William White (1876)
"A dead rose—some other plant, which now looks and smells decidedly hayey—a glove spotted with lemonade, and of no possible use to its rightful owner—a ..."

4. A Glossary of Words Used in the Neighbourhood of Sheffield by Sidney Oldall Addy (1888)
"The O. Icel. hafr, oat, seems, according to Cleasby, not to occur in old writers. Still the meaning may be oat-storth ( = oat croft?). hayey-CAVEY, adj. ..."

5. Over the Ocean: Or, Sights and Scenes in Foreign Lands by Curtis Guild (1884)
"... and a little off the line of travel that leads you through the great hotels in the great cities in America, — that saleratus bread, hayey tea, ..."

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