starrified
English
Etymology
From starrify.
Adjective
starrified (comparative more starrified, superlative most starrified)
- Decorated with stars, covered with stars.
- (Can we date this quote?) “Fuimus Troes: The True Trojans”, in Robert dodsley, editor, A Select Collection of Old Plays: In Twelve Volumes, published 1825:
- Accept this surcoat, starrified with pearls, / And diamonds, such as our own shores breed.
- 1849, Robert Southey, The Doctor, Etc, page 360:
- Of chesnut hair, his forehead starrified
- 1854, John Benjamin Heath, Some account of the Worshipful company of grocers of the city of London:
- […] green buskins starrified with gold, and laced with silver and gold ribon.
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- Turned into a celebrity star.
- 2011, Warren G. Harris, Natalie and R.J.: The Star-Crossed Love Affair of Natalie Wood and Robert Wagner:
- America needed a new starrified couple to focus their hopes and dreams on.
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Anagrams
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