different between moky vs mody

moky

English

Etymology

Compare Icelandic mökkvi (cloud, mist), mökkr (a dense cloud), Welsh mwg (smoke), and English muggy, muck.

Adjective

moky (comparative more moky, superlative most moky)

  1. (obsolete) misty; dark; murky

Anagrams

  • kymo-

moky From the web:

  • what is moky fit
  • what does merky mean
  • what does moky stand for
  • what does moku mean
  • what does mikhail mean


mody

English

Etymology

mode +? -y

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -??di

Adjective

mody (comparative more mody, superlative most mody)

  1. (dated) modish; fashionable

Anagrams

  • domy

Middle English

Alternative forms

  • (Early ME) modi?
  • modi, modye

Etymology

From Old English m?di?, from Proto-Germanic *m?dagaz; equivalent to mode +? -y.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?mo?di?/

Adjective

mody (comparative modyere)

  1. Boastful, conceited, arrogant, or vain; displaying pride.
  2. Furious; causing conflict, war, or strife.
  3. Courageous, mighty, glorious; praiseworthy.
  4. (rare) Showing sadness; mournful, upset, crying, dreary.
  5. (rare) Over-the-top, ornamented.
Descendants
  • English: moody
  • Scots: muidie
References
  • “m??di, adj.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 2018-09-23.

Silesian

Etymology

From Proto-Slavic *m?ld?.

Adjective

mody

  1. young
    Antonym: stary

Derived terms

  • modo??

mody From the web:

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  • what mody means
  • what is mody 2 diabetes
  • what does mody mean in diabetes
  • what does mody mean
  • what is mody 3
  • what is mody 5 diabetes
  • what causes mody
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