boardy

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From board +‎ -y.

Adjective[edit]

boardy (comparative boardier, superlative boardiest)

  1. (of a fabric) Having the texture of a hard board; inflexible and stiff.
    • 1934, Report of the Millowners’ Association, page 275:
      Produces a full, firm, and harsh feel often described as a boardy feel, in cloth filled with it.
    • 1939 June 5, “America Gets Rid of Deadweight”, in Life, page 12:
      Gone, too, are the days of boardy, heavy clothes for hot-weather wear.
    • 1944, Dyestuffs, page 187:
      Rice starch, on the other hand, penetrates better and gives a harder finish, with a fullness and firmness which is apt to be regarded as “boardy”; []
    • 1998, Noemia D’Souza, Fabric Care, New Age International Publishers, →ISBN, page 65:
      Rice starch gives clothes a boardy effect. It makes the fabric firm because it has good penetration into the cellulosic fibre.

References[edit]