different between lilied vs lilies
lilied
English
Etymology
lily +? -ed
Adjective
lilied (comparative more lilied, superlative most lilied)
- Covered with, or having many, lilies.
- 1634, John Milton, Arcades, III. Song, [1]
- Nymphs and Shepherds, dance no more / By sandy Ladon's lilied banks;
- 1906, Percy MacKaye, Jeanne d'Arc, Act III, New York: Macmillan, p. 114, [2]
- She drives you from the bridge. Her armour!— Now— / Oh, she is blown about and fluttered o'er / By clouds of little golden butterflies, / And where she thrusts her lilied banner through, / She glitters double—in the air and river.
- 1935, John Buchan, The House of the Four Winds, Prologue, [3]
- The summer term had been busy and stuffy, and to a Rugby player there were few attractions in punts among lilied backwaters.
- 1634, John Milton, Arcades, III. Song, [1]
lilied From the web:
lilies
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?l?liz/
Noun
lilies
- plural of lily
lilies From the web:
- what lilies are poisonous to cats
- what lilies are not poisonous to cats
- what lilies are edible
- what lilies smell the best
- what lilies are not poisonous to dogs
- what lilies are not toxic to cats
- what lilies mean
- what lilies bloom in the fall
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