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Definition of Fluffy
1. Adjective. Like down or as soft as down.
Similar to: Soft
Derivative terms: Down, Downiness, Floss, Fluff, Fluffiness
Definition of Fluffy
1. a. Pertaining to, or resembling, fluff or nap; soft and downy.
Definition of Fluffy
1. Proper noun. A popular given name for a pet, often for a cat. ¹
2. Proper noun. A stereotypical cat. ¹
3. Adjective. Covered with fluff. ¹
4. Adjective. Light; soft; airy. ¹
5. Adjective. (colloquial) Warm and comforting. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Fluffy
1. light and soft [adj FLUFFIER, FLUFFIEST] : FLUFFILY [adv]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Fluffy
Literary usage of Fluffy
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Forty Years an Advertising Agent, 1865-1905 by George Presbury Rowell (1906)
"The surface was fluffy, the fur stood out pretty straight, and if you blew upon
it the impact of the breath would produce a sort of a rosette that was very ..."
2. The Royal Academy of Arts: A Complete Dictionary of Contributors and Their ...by Algernon Graves by Algernon Graves (1906)
"1850. 366 Miss Talfourd. 381 Charles Massingberd, Esq. 1851. 1123 The Earl of
Morley. 1852. 971 Portrait of a lady 1856. 774 " Fluffy," daughter of W. ..."
3. The Birds of Ohio: A Complete Scientific and Popular Description of the 320 by William Leon Dawson, Lynds Jones (1902)
"... with glimpses of happy families at play among the reeds; but as it is, the
fluffy chicks are taught to fear the sight of man above all plagues. ..."
4. The Windsor Magazine (1905)
"An apparition in white anil pink fluffy things." " Why don't \?e po round and
round and round ? " she demanded. " I didn't know you wanted to go round and ..."
5. Therapeutic Gazette (1891)
"Mr. Walker examined optic discs and found them fluffy. October т—Sensible this
morning ; pupils normal ; pulse, 132 ; temperatures, 99.8°, 98.8°, 98 4°, ..."
6. The Golden Poppy by Emory Evans Smith (1902)
"... raising its six- to nine-inch corolla above a globular mass of leaves ten to
fifteen feet high, compared with the little fluffy dots of Canby poppy, ..."