crèmey
English
Etymology
Adjective
crèmey (comparative more crèmey, superlative most crèmey)
- Alternative form of cremey.
- 1997, Scott Lobdell, Elliot S! Maggin, “The Haymarket”, in Generation X, New York, N.Y.: Byron Preiss Multimedia Company; Boulevard Books, →ISBN, pages 100–101:
- At the dedication ceremony, attended and celebrated by the crème de Boston’s crème, there were only the crèmey faces of white officials and abolitionists allowed in the floor-level pews while the members of the congregation huddled in their own balcony and craned to see Thomas Paul sitting behind the pulpit and listening to the mayor speak.
- 2002 September 16, datafreq, “die roboter live at the electric workers 1 year anniversary friday sept 20 2002 toronto”, in [1] (Usenet), archived from the original on 18 June 2025:
- TLR (Greasing up dancefloors world wide with a crèmey mix of electro, disco, and other rarities)
- 2018, James Frey, Katerina, Simon & Schuster:
- I love crème brûlée, though this isn’t any better than the crème brûlée I can get in America. And it’s too burned on top, the crème isn’t crèmey enough.