gusty

Etymology 1

From gust + -y.

adj

  1. Of wind: blowing in gusts; blustery; tempestuous.
  2. (figurative) Characterized by or occurring in instances of sudden strong expression.
    A change evidently came over the countess's thoughts; her thin lips grew white (her eyes remained the same), and her voice when she spoke evidently surprised even herself by the violence of its gusty outburst. 1898, Leo Tolstoy (Nathan Haskell Dole, trans.), War and peace, page 103
    'No, no, no,' she said. 'Who could be disloyal to you, Miss?' And then the gusty tears came. 2012, Adam Roberts, Jack Glass
    The spirit becomes an ingrained part of one's life, not subject to gusty moods and feelings, but a habitual part of life. 2016, Robert Ellwood, Introducing Religion
  3. (figurative) Bombastic, verbose.
    “I am a man of few words,” shouted a red-necked House member as he started his second hour of a gusty speech. 1966, Jacob Morton Braude, Speech openers and closers - Volumes 1-4, page 53
    From the vigorous, warm, gusty oratory of the Gallican apologists, we pass into a thinner and cooler and quieter atmosphere, that of the Spanish lecture-room. 1987, Owen Chadwick, From Bossuet to Newman, page 21
    Kingsley came back again, Leonard countered his reply, and so it went on, with personal insults buried in paragraphs of gusty rhetoric. 2006, Victoria Glendinning, Leonard Woolf: A Biography, page 355
    Back then, it was the conservative backlash to canon reformation that blew hot with the gusty rhetoric of politics. 2010, Henry Louis Gates, Tradition and the Black Atlantic

Etymology 2

From Latin gustus (“tasting”).

adj

  1. With gusto
    His lips, warm with his words, caught hers in a gusty kiss. 1917, The Green Book Magazine - Volume 18, page 486
    I give her a gusty wink. 2004, John Cottle, The Blessings of Hard-used Angels, page 152
    The prime aim of the Bondo dormitory is selection of marriage partners and they are free to have sexual experiences, but not, of course, intercourse, which the boys call with a gusty smile "breast play". 2007, Prakash Chandra Mehta, Sonu Mehta, Cultural Heritage of Indian Tribes, page 31
    She laughed, a gusty laugh, one that lit up her entire face and told you that she found fun in most situations. 2009, Deni Bash Hoffman, All's Fair in Love and Mystery, page 48
    And so did his lordship as he stood and praised her performance, his beard scratching a gusty kiss on her cheek while handing her the winners' trophy in our behalf. 2012, Irene Hope-Hedrick, 'Twill Be All Right Come Mornin', Luv, page 32

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