different between bookly vs booky

bookly

English

Etymology

From Middle English *bocli, from Old English b?cl?? (of or belonging to a book, scientific, biblical, scriptural); equivalent to book +? -ly. Cognate with Danish boglig (bookish), Swedish boklig (bookish, literary).

Adjective

bookly (comparative booklier or more bookly, superlative bookliest or most bookly)

  1. Of or pertaining to books; literary.
    • 1919, Flora Warren Seymour, Bookfellows, The Step Ladder: Volumes 1-5:
      As you received this and many other bookly treasures, all for the small annual fee of one dollar, []
  2. Learned from books; bookish; by-the-book.

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booky

English

Etymology 1

book +? -y

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?b?ki/
  • Homophone: bookie
  • Rhymes: -?ki

Adjective

booky (comparative bookier, superlative bookiest)

  1. (dated) bookish
Derived terms
  • bookiness

Etymology 2

(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)

Pronunciation

  • (MLE) IPA(key): /?by?ki/
  • Rhymes: -u?ki

Adjective

booky (comparative bookier, superlative bookiest)

  1. (MLE) treacherous, snitchy, not trustworthy

Anagrams

  • Boyko

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