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woodsy
/ ˈwʊdzɪ /
adjective
- informal.of, reminiscent of, or connected with woods
a woodsy mountain hideaway
Word History and Origins
Example Sentences
Undulating through Oklahoma’s woodsy backroads is the Talimena Scenic Byway, a 54-mile route through Choctaw Country, and the Winding Stair Picnic Area is the most dazzling of the drive.
The terrain of the often woodsy Southeast could make it harder to see tornadoes coming, and houses tend to not have basements or tornado shelters in the same frequency as those along tornado alley.
The dining room at Juniper Bar and Restaurant in Burlington is about as bespoke as one would expect from a woodsy Vermont establishment.
Hall plays Beth, a recently widowed teacher living somewhere in woodsy upstate New York.
The old woodsy village of Big Sur is here, with its general store and classic digs, and it all feels as wild and rugged as the coast itself.
For a washed-rind variety, the nutty, buttery, woodsy, animally tastes are a result of this intricate chemical process.
Like a scorching hot August breeze the magic, woodsy fragrance crinkled through his nostrils.
It suggested something quite as pleasing as the liveliest bird-song, and was if anything more woodsy and wild.
They were so spicy, so woodsy, so redolent of a fine sweetness that had no cloying element in it.
In front of this woodsy background were the white tops of the wagons.
He was a bronze Apollo, with the air of freedom that is native to mountaineers and woodsy folks.
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