¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Fuzzier
1. fuzzy [adj] - See also: fuzzy
Lexicographical Neighbors of Fuzzier
Literary usage of Fuzzier
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Study of the Absorption Spectra of Solutions of Certain Salts of Potassium by Harry Clary Jones, William Walker Strong (1910)
"At A 5217 a narrow, sharp line runs through the fuzzier and wider band. Broad (about
30 Angstrom units wide) and very faint bands are located at A 5630 and ..."
2. Proposed National Strategies For The Prevention Of Leading Work-related (1988)
"In the 1983 George H. Gehrmann Lecture to the American Occupational Medicine
Association, Collings noted a "relentless" trend toward a "fuzzier and fuzzier" ..."
3. Butterflies and Bees: The Insect Folk : Volume II by Margaret Warner Morley (1905)
"Nell says that our Luna is fuzzier than a butterfly. The moths are generally
thicker and fuzzier than the butterflies. John wants to know from what kind of ..."
4. Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance 1994 (1994)
"In the 1983 George H. Gehrmann Lecture to the American Occupational Medicine
Association, Collings noted a "relentless" trend toward a "fuzzier and fuzzier" ..."
5. Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society Held at Philadelphia for by American Philosophical Society (1909)
"The general effect of rise in temperature here is to cause the lines to become
slightly fuzzier and to show more of a " washed out" appearance. ..."
6. Merchants' Magazine and Commercial Review by William B. Dana (1869)
"3d. The short staple cotton—used almost exclusively for weft or filling. It is
drier, "fuzzier," more like rough wool,and ..."
7. The Cotton Trade: Its Bearing Upon the Prosperity of Great Britain and by McHenry, George (1863)
"But it ¡H ' different in character from the second description, as well a» '
shorter in fibre ; it is drier, fuzzier—more like rough wool ; ' and it cannot ..."
8. Serving the American Public: Best Practices in Customer-Driven Strategic by Albert Gore, Albert Gore, Jr (1998)
"The fuzzier the goals, the more chaos in an organization; the more clearly goals
are communicated, the easier it is for employees to decide what needs to be ..."