octopusine
English
Etymology
Adjective
octopusine (comparative more octopusine, superlative most octopusine)
- (rare) Resembling or characteristic of an octopus.
- Synonym: octopusical
- 1983, Mark Helprin, Winter's Tale[1], page 335:
- The harbor was complicated enough for Craig Binky once to have called it “octopusine,” and Asbury might easily have bumbled into Jamaica Bay or tried to fight the tidal rush in the East River, were it not for the pilot he had taken on.
- 1995, Colin Larkin, editors, The Guinness Encyclopedia of Popular Music[2], page 312:
- Batu’s guitarist Chris Franck, after playing samba whilst studying for a degree in France, was tutored by two expatriate Brazilians, Pedro (guitar) and Beberto de Souza (octopusine percussion).
- 1996, Rohit Manchanda, editors, In the Light of the Black Sun[3], page 148:
- Then his body seemed to turn into rubber; it was as if his joints forgot that they existed, and his limbs turned into octopusine tentacles. His legs went over his head, and round his neck. His arms went under his legs and up his back.
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:octopusine.