corpsy
English
Etymology
Adjective
corpsy (comparative more corpsy, superlative most corpsy)
- Resembling a corpse; resembling that of a corpse.
- 1866, J. W. Palmer, "My Heathen at Home" in The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 18, December 1866, p. 732, [1]
- But I must acknowledge there was something truly corpsy in the solemnity with which he would “lay out” a clean shirt.
- 1939, George Orwell, chapter 4, in Coming Up for Air[2]:
- How it came back to me! That peculiar feeling—it was only a feeling, you couldn't describe it as an activity—that we used to call 'Church'. The sweet corpsy smell, the rustle of Sunday dresses, the wheeze of the organ and the roaring voices […]
- 1942, Emily Carr, The Book of Small, "Christmas," [3]
- Christmas Eve Father took us into town to see the shops lit up. Every lamp post had a fir tree tied to it—not corpsy old trees but fresh cut firs.
- 1866, J. W. Palmer, "My Heathen at Home" in The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 18, December 1866, p. 732, [1]