octopusical

English

Etymology

From octopus +‎ -ical.

Adjective

octopusical (comparative more octopusical, superlative most octopusical)

  1. (rare) Synonym of octopusine.
    • 2005, Jeffrey Dinsmore, I, an Actress: The Autobiography of Karen Jamey[1], page 80:
      Soon, we were in the bedroom, arms and legs and privates entangled in an octopusical display of sexual dexterity.
    • 2009, Deji Badiru, Getting Things Done Through Project Management[2], page 30:
      If these “Octopusical” projects are not closed, they continue to consume time and resources while detracting from valuable accomplishments.
    • 2010, Max Yoho, With the Wisdom of Owls[3], page 40:
      It is absolutely true that twins have a special relatioship. This truth even exits when one twin slightly resembles a handsome owl and the other is a bitch octopus. It is a mysterious telepathic connection that renders keeping secrets impossible. Were it not so.
      I’m sure Violet (the octopusical one) enjoyed this very much.