nosie
English
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editnosie (plural nosies)
- (childish) A nose.
- 1888 September 29, Ernest E. Leigh, “Fido vs. Baby”, in Saturday Night, volume 1, number 44, Toronto, Ont., page 6, column 5:
- Oh! how his little nosie / Is wet with morning dew, / From yonder garden posey / Of pansy blossoms blue.
- 1908, Alexander R[obert] Fordyce, Elenore or, Love’s Conquest: A Rambling Serio-Comic Play-Novel, Newark, N.J.: […] Brant & Borden, act III, page 112:
- You are my little honey Rosie, / Though freckled be your little nosie.
- 1921 November, Fannie Hurst, “The Vertical City”, in Cosmopolitan, volume LXXI, number 5, page 37, column 2:
- Say, every time that little Jane daubed some whitewash on her little nosie, she gave that grandstand the squints.
- 1925 early February (?), Thomas Wolfe, edited by Elizabeth Nowell, The Letters of Thomas Wolfe, New York, N.Y.: Charles Scribner’s Sons, published 1956, →LCCN, page 82:
- I think I will do as much for my friends as almost anyone you can find, but I won’t wipe their little nosies, take them to the little room where one goes all alone, or kiss them lovingly before [they go to bed(?)]
- 2004, Eric Garcia, Cassandra French’s Finishing School for Boys, ReganBooks, →ISBN, page 55:
- Look how dry their poor little nosies are.
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editnosie m inan
Categories:
- English terms suffixed with -ie
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- English lemmas
- English nouns
- English countable nouns
- English childish terms
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- Polish terms with IPA pronunciation
- Rhymes:Polish/ɔɕɛ
- Rhymes:Polish/ɔɕɛ/2 syllables
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