Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- verb Third-person singular simple present indicative form of
cloy .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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Rude language can spice up a conversation; but on the page it rapidly cloys.
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Bravo, which used to toy with cultural irony regarding materialism now cloys us with "real" Lindsey Lohans (sans the talent) and slightly better-educated Snookies as a way to boost the ratings.
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Bravo, which used to toy with cultural irony regarding materialism now cloys us with "real" Lindsey Lohans (sans the talent) and slightly better-educated Snookies as a way to boost the ratings.
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And root from out the soul the deadly weed which cloys?
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What makes this almost parodic is the self-conscious whimsy that conjoins animate and inanimate in a gesture of closeness conventionally reserved for animate beings alone, an archness that often cloys in Hunt but that points to a more serious scrambling of subjects and objects in bibliophilic writing generally, where books repeatedly turn into quasi-subjects and persons into quasi-objects.
Bibliographic Romance: Bibliophilia and the Book Object 2004
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Possession, which cloys Man, only increases the affection of
The Monk 2004
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Conducting health education sessions also gives participants a sense of accomplishment and a moons to assess what they have learned about health education in the post few cloys.
Chapter 10 1985
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Of thy combing hand, the while it travelling cloys
Early Reviews of English Poets John Louis Haney
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She had nothing but beauty, which cloys when it comes alone
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Little De Roye, who was a very, pretty German lass at her house, informed me of it, and made me amends for the infidelity of the mistress, whose choice, to tell you the truth, did not mortify me much, because she had nothing but beauty, which cloys when it comes alone.
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