Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
moonful
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Remove ads
English
Etymology 1
Adjective
moonful (not comparable)
- Marked by the presence of the moon.
- 1986, Steve Erickson, Rubicon Beach, Open Road Integrated Media, published 2013, →ISBN:
- She sobbed herself to sleep and then dreamed she was walking on a beach on a moonful night, a strange but distantly known city on the horizon.
- 2008, Thomas Glave, The Torturer's Wife, City Lights Books, →ISBN:
- Yet let it also be known that long before that dire time, on a future moonful night, a voice shall rise up out of the yawning sea and recall it: […]
- 2008, Susan Zwinger, Ann Zwinger, “Learning Nature Through the Senses”, in Teaching About Place: Learning from the Land, University of Nevada Press, →ISBN, page 20:
- I, Susan, remember dressing exotically, eating organic foods, and exploring the duende of deep flamenco passion, playing the guitar on hilltops on moonful nights.
- Resembling the moon in some manner, such as being round, bright, etc.
- 1866 January 1, Andrew Wynter, “Distinguished Settlers from Abroad”, in Good Words, page 47:
- The cattle-shed is equally curious, containing specimens of the genus Bos, the Brahmin cattle with their mild moonful eyes, […]
Etymology 2
Noun
moonful (plural moonfuls)
- An amount sufficient to fill the moon.
- 1865 October, “Wilhelm Meisters Apprenticeship”, in The Atlantic Monthly, page 451:
- For suggestion of what one may really do, and for impelling one toward the practicable best, I find this book worth a moonful of " Consuelos."
- 2001, Radiohead, “Pyramid Song”, in Amnesiac:
- I jumped in the river, what did I see? / Black-eyed angels swam with me / A moonful of stars and astral cars / And all the figures I used to see
Anagrams
Remove ads
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads