pusy
English
editEtymology
editAdjective
editpusy (not comparable)
- Alternative form of pussy (“containing pus; purulent”)
- 1918, Proceedings, page 69:
- […] the right kidney, although it also contained a stone and eliminated a pusy urine.
- 1920, George Frederick Shrady, Thomas Lathrop Stedman, Medical Record, page 1058:
- The term pus had been used in a somewhat indefinite sense, in such descriptions as "a purulent substance," "a sero-purulent discharge" or "a pusy discharge." The fact was that a serous exudate, such as was found in these acute cases […]
- 1938, Supreme Court, page 62:
- A. It was a pusy opening. There was pus drainage there. Q. How long was the opening? A. About one quarter inch.
- 1998, Tony Chu, Anne Lovell, The Good Skin Doctor: A Dermatologist's Survival Guide to Acne, HarperThorsons, →ISBN:
- However, if you develop a pusy spot and you cannot face going out with it, carefully wash your hands, sterilize a pin or a needle in a flame and let it cool down, carefully puncture the skin over the collection of pus, then gently squeeze the ...
Anagrams
editCzech
editPronunciation
editNoun
editpusy f
- inflection of pusa: