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Zizzy vs Fizzy - What's the difference?

zizzy | fizzy |

As adjectives the difference between zizzy and fizzy

is that zizzy is {{cx|informal|lang=en}} zazzy; flashy; eye-catching while fizzy is containing bubbles.

As a noun fizzy is

a non-alcoholic carbonated beverage. Short for fizzy drink.

zizzy

English

Adjective

(en adjective)
  • zazzy; flashy; eye-catching
  • * 1973 , Punch
  • The irrepressible and arguably irredeemable Al Capp, an expansive, mature and very regular citizen from New Haven, Connecticut, is a man with a facility for open, cynical wise-cracks, a man who knows a zizzy pin-stripe when he sees one
  • * 1988 , The Listener
  • How did you write a zizzy tabloid head in ten minutes from what they did have in the box?
  • * 2012 , Wendy Perriam, Born of Woman
  • A week ago, she had daubed them all with body paint—Hugh and Robert red with spots, even the solemn Charles a zizzy green.
  • tingling
  • * 1998 , Myra Schneider, John Killick, Writing for self-discovery
  • There's a zizzy feeling, prickles in my fingers and toes and a sudden blackness with whorls of light. When I come to Aunt is leaning over me, her ear next to my heart and her fat hot fingers loosening the buttons at the collar of my dress.
  • * 2012 , Richard Ford, The Lay of the Land
  • I go to the window again in my terry-cloth robe, my heart pumping, a zizzy bee-sting quiver down my arms and legs, my bare feet cold on the floor planks.

    fizzy

    English

    Adjective

    (er)
  • (of a liquid) Containing bubbles.
  • (figurative) Delightful, exciting, interesting.
  • * '>citation
  • (onomatopoeia) Makes a hissing sound.
  • Noun

    (-)
  • (NZ) A non-alcoholic carbonated beverage. Short for fizzy drink.
  • Derived terms

    * fizzy drink