lacey
See also: Lacey
English
Adjective
lacey (comparative lacier, superlative laciest)
- Alternative spelling of lacy.
- 1901, Helen Follett Stevans, The Woman Beautiful[1]:
- Skirts of white muslin, with pretty frills and lacey trimmings that fall in soft folds and ruffles around one's feet, are mighty dainty things for the summer girl--but is there a colder sound than that of a starched white petticoat in the dead of winter?
- 1914, Virginia Brooks, Little Lost Sister[2]:
- She was dressed in a lacey gown, a size too large for her.
- 2008 July 11, The New York Times, “Museum and Gallery Listings”, in New York Times[3]:
- Michael Brown’s stainless-steel simulation of a cracked mirror freezes an act of anarchy into a lovely, lacey web.
Anagrams
Afar
| 60[a], [b] | ||
| ← 5 | 6 | 7 → |
|---|---|---|
| Cardinal: lacéy Ordinal: laceyháytu Fractional: laceytá | ||
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Proto-Cushitic. Cognates include Iraqw lahhóoʼ, Sidamo lee, Somali líx and Saho lix, Kambaata lého.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /laˈħej/ [lʌˈħɛj]
- Hyphenation: la‧cey
Noun
lacéy m
Usage notes
- When used as a determiner, the genitive case is used:
- Licá númu. ― Six people.
- When counting, the predicative case is used.