seagulled
English
editEtymology
editAdjective
editseagulled (comparative more seagulled, superlative most seagulled)
- Filled with seagulls.
- 1985, Christopher Rush, A Twelvemonth and a Day, Canongate Books, published 1994, →ISBN, page 146:
- Opening my eyes again, my poppy head hanging over the edge, I watched the flatfish flapping slowly in and out of the harbour mouth, taking the sun on the sandgreen bed of the bottom, where the seagulled sky was superimposed like a dream — birds and fish mingling in an impossible element.
Verb
editseagulled
- simple past and past participle of seagull