different between foxy vs foy

foxy

English

Etymology

From fox +? -y.

Pronunciation

  • (General American) IPA(key): /?f?ksi/
  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?f?ksi/
  • Rhymes: -?ksi
  • Hyphenation: fox?y

Adjective

foxy (comparative foxier, superlative foxiest)

  1. Having the qualities of a fox.
  2. Cunning, sly.
  3. Attractive, sexy (of a woman).
  4. (of a person, especially a woman) Reddish-brown haired.
  5. (art) Using too much of the reddish-brown colours.
    • 1844, Benjamin Robert Haydon, Lectures on Painting and Design:
      His eye for colour was so exquisite that I do not think there is a single instance in all his works of a heated tint which is called foxy. This cannot be said of Rubens or Rembrandt []
    • 1870, Frederick Peter Seguier, A Critical and Commercial Dictionary of the Works of Painters:
      Although the skies of Brydael's pictures are often broken with rather heavy masses of orange and yellow clouds, yet, taking him altogether, he was not a 'foxy' painter; on the contrary, there is a silvery coolness about some of his pictures which pleases us.
  6. (of wine) Having an animal-like odour.

Synonyms

  • See also Thesaurus:sexy

Translations

foxy From the web:

  • what foxy means
  • what foxy looks like
  • what foxes eat
  • what foxes eat in minecraft
  • what foxes are endangered
  • what foxes look like
  • what foxes live in the desert
  • what foxes do


foy

English

Etymology

From Middle French foy.

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -??

Noun

foy (countable and uncountable, plural foys)

  1. (obsolete, rare) Faith, allegiance.
  2. (obsolete) A feast given by one about to leave a place.
    • 1661 November 25, Samuel Pepys, The Diary of Samuel Pepys: 1661, 2006, Echo Library, page 124,
      To Westminster Hall in the morning with Captain Lambert, and there he did at the Dog give me and some other friends of his, his foy, he being to set sail to-day towards the Streights.

Middle French

Etymology

From Old French foi.

Noun

foy f (plural foys)

  1. faith
    • 1532, François Rabelais, Pantagruel:
      Saigneur Dieu oste moy de ce torment, auquel ces traitres chiens me detiennent, pour la maintenance de ta foy.
      Lord God remove me from this torment in which these traiterous dogs are holding, to help me keep your faith.

Descendants

  • French: foi

Portuguese

Verb

foy

  1. Obsolete spelling of foi

foy From the web:

  • what foyer means
  • what do you
  • what do you meme
  • what do you call jokes
  • what do you need to get a passport
  • what do you mean
  • what do you do with a drunken sailor
  • what do yellow roses mean
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