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cloy
/ klɔɪ /
verb
- to make weary or cause weariness through an excess of something initially pleasurable or sweet
Other Words From
- over·cloy verb (used with object)
- un·cloyed adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of cloy1
Example Sentences
Those who turned 10 before that date were “too old for something so cloying and cute,” said Barney.
Fortunately, there is also enough good-natured goofball humor to keep Gordon Greenberg’s production from sinking into cloying goo.
Before we get into what the Rabbit Hole is, here’s what it isn’t: a place with touch screens, a ball pit, inscrutable plaques, velvet ropes, a cloying soundtrack or adults in costumes.
In contrast, the Neue’s exhibition contains just six late landscapes, and not always the best, since half of them center on vine-covered forest cottages and lakeside villas and can be cloying.
But the 95-minute score is so blandly cloying, the rhymed-couplets text so stiff and the characters so cardboard, that not a moment ends up surprising or moving.
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