Cheesy vs Oily - What's the difference?
cheesy | oily |
of or relating to cheese
resembling, or containing cheese
(informal) of poor quality through being overdramatic, excessively emotional or , trite, contrived, shoddy
* 2008 , Jeff Spanke, Second Hand Out (page 86)
* 2012 , Ginny Felch, Photographing Children Photo Workshop
Relating to oil.
Smeared with or containing oil.
(figuratively) Excessively friendly or polite so as to sound insincere.
A marble with an oily lustre.
* 1998 , Joanna Cole, Stephanie Calmenson, Michael Street, Marbles: 101 ways to play
* 2001 , Paul Webley, The economic psychology of everyday life (page 39)
oilskins (waterproof garment)
As adjectives the difference between cheesy and oily
is that cheesy is of or relating to cheese while oily is relating to oil.As a noun oily is
a marble with an oily lustre.cheesy
English
Adjective
(er)- This sandwich is full of cheesy goodness.
- a cheesy flavor
- I like pizzas with a cheesy crust.
- a cheesy song
- a cheesy movie
- Needless to say, toward the end of Martin's first term, the relationship he once enjoyed with President Waverly had evolved into a slapdash charade of cheap promises and cheesy smiles.
- There is something about 5- and 6-year-olds that makes them ever-ready to pose with the big, cheesy grin with no provocation.
Synonyms
* cheeseball * corny * tackyDerived terms
* cheesinessoily
English
Alternative forms
* oyly (obsolete)Adjective
(er)Derived terms
* smell of an oily ragNoun
(oilies)- Lustered (also called lusters, rainbows, oilies , and pearls)
- But marbles are not only used to play games: they are also traded. In this market, the value of the different kinds of marbles (oilies , emperors, etc.) is determined by local supply and demand and not by the price of the marbles