diesely

English

Etymology

diesel + -y

Adjective

diesely (comparative more diesely, superlative most diesely)

  1. Characteristic of dieseling.
    • 2007, Mardi McConnochie, Melissa, Queen of Evil, →ISBN:
      As the car drew closer the sound of the engine became a deep diesely rumble and I realised that it wasn't a car at all – it was a truck.
    • 2010, Carl Safina, Song for the Blue Ocean, →ISBN:
      He throttles down, and the engines' roar quiets to a diesely growl.
    • 2011, Jeremy Clarkson, Round the Bend, →ISBN:
      Yes, it sounds a bit coarse and diesely when you fire it up, but thereafter, it's sewing-machine smooth, nicely zingy and almost unbelievably economical.
  2. Pertaining to, typical of, or filled with diesel fuel.
    • 1999, Mark Kingwell, Marginalia: A Cultural Reader, →ISBN, page 32:
      My apartment, and the garden, are just a block away from the busy intersection of Bathurst and Dupont, with its diesely bus lanes and truck traffic, but, barring an emergency-vehicle siren or an atypical outbreak of energy from the body-shop workers across the alley, the garden is calm, even meditative.
    • 2004, Sonny Brewer, Stories from the Blue Moon Café III, →ISBN, page 16:
      Let me tell you, under twenty feet of diesely mud-water, the flowing robes of the Order of St. Benedict don't flow — and rosaries on a belt can get tangled up to beat hell in corkscrewy windscreen wipers.
    • 2015, Alan Warner, Morvern Callar, →ISBN, page 141:
      Coll swung his big leather bag onto the diesely floor beside the driver's seat.
    • 2015, Winona Kent, Cold Play, →ISBN:
      It feels and smells dankish and diesely.

Anagrams

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.