different between teary vs teasy
teary
English
Etymology
From Middle English tery; equivalent to tear +? -y.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?t???i/
- Rhymes: -??ri
Adjective
teary (comparative tearier, superlative teariest)
- Of a person, having eyes filled with tears; inclined to cry.
- No wonder Ryan was teary; he missed his parents.
- Of eyes, filled with tears.
- Wade looked into his girlfriend's teary eyes.
Synonyms
- (person):
- (eyes): tear-filled, wet
Antonyms
- (person): dry-eyed
- (eyes): dry
Derived terms
- teary-eyed
Translations
Anagrams
- e-tray
teary From the web:
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teasy
English
Etymology
From Cornish tesek (“hot,fiery”).
Adjective
teasy (comparative more teasy, superlative most teasy)
- (colloquial, Britain, Cornwall) Irritable or angry.
Anagrams
- Yates, Yeats, as yet, yates, yeast, yeats
teasy From the web:
- what's teasy lights
- teasy meaning
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- what does tease mean
- what does ready mean
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