释义 |
headachy, a.|ˈhɛdeɪkɪ| [f. headache + -y.] 1. Suffering from or subject to headache.
1795Lady Newdigate Let. Aug. in A. E. Newdigate-Newdegate Cheverels (1898) xi. 154 Want of sleep..makes me feel Languid & headachy in a Morning. 1813Jane Austen Let. 29 Jan. (1952) 298, I was rather headachey that day & could not venture on anything sweet except jelly. 1833H. Martineau Briery Creek vi. 136 Mrs. Temple arose, head-achy and feverish. a1834Lamb Final Mem. i. To Coleridge, From your afflicted, headachey, sore⁓throatey, humble servant. 1897M. Kingsley W. Africa 234, I go, dead tired and still head-achy..with my host. 2. Accompanied with or producing headache.
1828Lady Granville Lett. (1894) II. 26 The consequence..is the heavy headachy accablement. 1862Rawlinson Anc. Mon. I. 44 The wine, ‘sweet but headachy’. Hence headachiness.
1862Geo. Eliot Let. 1 May (1956) IV. 28 In a moment of feverish headachiness I transgressed my own rule. 1872― in Life (1885) III. 149 Dragged back into headachiness by a little too much fatigue. |