Ropy vs Roopy - What's the difference?
ropy | roopy |
Resembling a rope.
Capable of forming rope-like or thread-like structures.
(British, colloquial) Of poor quality; in poor health.
*2012 , The Economist, Sept. 8th, "
*:Although Britain’s migration figures are ropey , other data point in the same direction.
(of milk or another liquid) Slimy, as'' after the action of ''Enterobacter aerogenes in syrup.
Hoarse.
*1863 , Charles Dickens, David Copperfield :
*1934 , P G Wodehouse, Thank You, Jeeves :
As adjectives the difference between ropy and roopy
is that ropy is resembling a rope while roopy is hoarse.ropy
English
Alternative forms
* ropeyAdjective
(en-adj)Emigration: On The Road"
Anagrams
* ----roopy
English
Alternative forms
* (l) (Scotland)Adjective
(en-adj)- But he said he had observed I was sometimes hoarse — a little roopy was his exact expression — and it should be, every drop, devoted to the purpose he had mentioned.
- It wasn't in its essentials a musical voice, being on the thick side and a shade roopy . If I'd been its owner, I'd have given more than a little thought to the subject of tonsils.