trouty

See also: Trouty

English

Etymology

trout + -y

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -aʊti

Adjective

trouty (comparative troutier, superlative troutiest)

  1. Containing trout.
    • 1856, Knickerbocker:
      The grass improved, they saw wild-flowers and flax, and when the water of the creek took his fancy as looking trouty, Wilford Woodruff got out the artificial flies he had brought from his last mission in England and tried a little
    • c. 1926 Rudyard Kipling - "Alnaschar and the Oxen" from the collection Debits and Credits
      At the gate beside the river where the trouty shallows brawl, I know the pride that Lobengula felt
    • 1929, Ernest Hemingway, The Sun Also Rises:
      The stream was clear and shallow but it did not look trouty.
  2. Resembling or characteristic of trout.
    • 1881, Charles Woodbury Stevens, Fly-fishing in Maine Lakes: Or, Camp-life in the Wilderness, page 70:
      Except in extremely hot weather, I have found that trout packed in this manner reach Boston in very fine order, and have quite a trouty taste and appearance; []

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