lemonady

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English

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Adjective

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lemonady (comparative more lemonady, superlative most lemonady)

  1. Alternative form of lemonadey
    • 1925, The Hospital Quarterly, volume 9, page 50:
      Now Mr. England states that personal friends of his purchased in Paris at an equivalent of fourteen cents per bottle the French Codex preparation, and “were most enthusiastic about its delicious ‘lemonady’ taste and efficient action,” claiming that it was markedly superior to the “citrate of magnesia” sold in the United States.
    • 1973 December 16, Chicago Tribune, 127th year, number 350, page 16:
      Some durable ditties and Booth Tarkington’s even more durable stories and pleasant warbling and good natured emoting by Doris and Gordon makes this lemonady mixture pleasant enough, as tomboy Day falls for the Indiana college man across the street.
    • 1995 July 7, “Lemonade row bubbles over”, in Solihull News, page 34:
      Mr Peter Booth, of Olton Road, Shirley, said: “You can taste the lemonade and you wouldn’t know there was alcohol in there. It is very lemonady but it hasn’t got any bite to it.”