different between moonly vs soonly

moonly

English

Etymology

From Middle English monelich, from Old English m?nl?? (lunar), equivalent to moon +? -ly.

Adjective

moonly (comparative more moonly, superlative most moonly)

  1. (now rare) Of, pertaining to, or characteristic of the Moon; lunar; moonlike.
    • 1839, James Silk Buckingham, John Sterling, Frederick Denison Maurice, The Athenæum:
      Here and there were young moonly faces selling refreshments.
    • 1888, Hiram Erastus Butler, The Esoteric:
      Then, the regenerative process will be changed; the moonly changes will begin to go the reverse way around the zodiac. Ladies will observe that the time of their moonly weakness will come one sign earlier or about two and a half days []
    • 1983, Vy?sa, Vi?van?tha Cakravartin, Bhakti Siddhanta Saraswati, Srimad Bh?gavatam of Sri Krishnadvaip?yana Vy?sa:
      When the Gopis looked towards the fruit-laden trees lit up with the moonly light, the Gallant-lover remarked, "fruits I alone can reward and this is best congenial atmosphere to beg to to Me.
  2. (by extension, now rare) Lunatic. (Can we add an example for this sense?)

Related terms

  • sunly

moonly From the web:

  • what does moony mean
  • what is moonly app


soonly

English

Etymology

soon +? -ly. Since the late 15th century.

Adverb

soonly (comparative more soonly, superlative most soonly)

  1. (obsolete or dialect) Soon.

References

  • soonly in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.

soonly From the web:

  • what does sos only mean
  • what meaning soonly
  • what does it mean when it says sos only
  • what sos only mean
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