Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • adjective summer-like

Etymologies

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Examples

  • The Kootenay valley is as summerish and splendored and cross-lit as ever.

    hughstimson.org » Blog Archive » Kooteny Coastal, Season II 2009

  • I'd thought the trees in South County and out on the islands would be much greener than they were, and the wintry-looking trees coupled with the summerish weather set my nerves even more on edge.

    Exit, Stage Left sovay 2009

  • I mention this because it's just one of the summerish beer festivals held around the state.

    Thursday Press Release - Tri-State Taste of Barley, Platteville, WI 2009

  • I mention this because it's just one of the summerish beer festivals held around the state.

    Archive 2009-05-01 2009

  • A little to summerish for this time of the year but it always makes me feel terrific.

    Barack Obama responds to the criticism over Jeremiah Wright. Ann Althouse 2008

  • Caleb feels a wistfulness press in on him, as if each growing inch of the woodpile is taking away something summerish—a bright flock of goldfinches, a raging stream, the steam of loam overturned by a tiller.

    Perfect Match JODI PICOULT 2002

  • Caleb feels a wistfulness press in on him, as if each growing inch of the woodpile is taking away something summerish—a bright flock of goldfinches, a raging stream, the steam of loam overturned by a tiller.

    Perfect Match JODI PICOULT 2002

  • Caleb feels a wistfulness press in on him, as if each growing inch of the woodpile is taking away something summerish—a bright flock of goldfinches, a raging stream, the steam of loam overturned by a tiller.

    Perfect Match JODI PICOULT 2002

  • Although the weather has turned cooler, the first few days it was summerish here in New York City.

    CNN Transcript Sep 15, 2001 2001

  • The mid-day weather at this time was decidedly summerish, the temperature having the _feel_ of about seventy in our latitude, but ranging there from eighty to ninety degrees.

    The Knickerbocker, or New-York Monthly Magazine, January 1844 Volume 23, Number 1 Various

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