different between roky vs moky
roky
English
Etymology
roke +? -y
Adjective
roky (comparative more roky, superlative most roky)
- (Britain, dialect) misty; foggy; cloudy
- 1993, Annie Proulx, The Shipping News, Scribner (1999), ?ISBN, page 40:
- They walked around in the roky damp, in silence.
- 1993, Annie Proulx, The Shipping News, Scribner (1999), ?ISBN, page 40:
References
1674, John Ray, A Collection of English Words Not Generally Used
Anagrams
- Kory, York, york
Czech
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [?rok?]
Noun
roky
- nominative/accusative/vocative/instrumental plural of rok
roky From the web:
- rocky means
- roku tv
- what killed roky erickson
- what does roky mean
- what does roku do
- what did roky erickson die of
- roku pay
- what does roku have
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)
- (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
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- roky vs moky
- ropy vs roky
- roky vs roke
- monsterizes vs monsterises
- vampirist vs vampirish
- vampirism vs vampirist
- craving vs vampirist
- vampirish vs vampirism
- extortion vs vampirism
- blood vs vampirism
- vampirism vs vampire
- lumps vs glumps
- clumps vs glumps
- glumps vs glomps
- dark vs glummy
- bummy vs rummy
- nummy vs bummy
- bummy vs bimmy
- bummy vs bumpy
- bummy vs gummy