elmy


Also found in: Acronyms.
Related to elmy: conspiratory

elmy

(ˈɛlmɪ)
adj, -mier or -miest
(Plants) relating to, or abounding in, elm trees
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
by Durham Heritage Coastline The centre tells the story of the tragedy of the George Elmy lifeboat and how it was restored.
See Sandra Holton, "Free Love and Victorian Feminism: The Divers Matrimoniais of Elizabeth Wolstenholme and Ben Elmy," Victorian Studies 37, no.
Elmy Wincent and Ciby Babu of Team Concepts claimed third place.
According to Glaser, the three lease signings at 534 Broadhollow Road include FST Engineers, ELMY'S Special Services, and Sundack Accounting.
Global energy confinement obtained with a configuration optimized according to neoclassical theory, has proved comparable to that of tokamaks running in ELMy Hmode, exhibiting a gyro-Bohm-like property as seen in the International Stellarator Scaling (ISS95).
Chris Elmy, from Lockdales, said that the item would be of particular interest to collectors due to the shortage of football programmes from that era, with most being recycled because of a paper shortage.
"Students need more science and math backgrounds to run this equipment," says Elmy Savoie, a spokeswoman for Fletcher.
The group was honored to hear from two keynote speakers--Joan McCallen, president and CEO of ICMA-RC, an NLC Capstone Corporate Partner; and Elmy Bermejo, director of intergovernmental affairs, Department of Labor.
(12) For instance, committed to the right of women to assert control over their bodies, Elizabeth Wolstenholme Elmy understood sexual subjugation as the foundation of female oppression and, like many women's rights advocates of her time, saw sexual intercourse as merely necessary for the purposes of reproduction.
the mighty majesty Of that huge amphitheatre of rich And elmy fields, seems like society-Conversing with the mind, and giving it A livelier impulse and a dance of thought!' (Coleridge: Fears in Solitude.)
"Briggs has neglected to mention at any point in his book that the optimism and exchange of ideas rely very much on an information-free and open society," wrote Elmy Lung, a graduate student and Hong Kong native.
In a letter to Edmund Burke, dated 26 June 1781, Crabbe reveals his own financial concerns (4) and notes that he has been supported generously by the widowed mother of his dear friend, Sarah Elmy, despite "concealing the severity of my Situation, for I would not involve in my Errors or Misfortunes a very generous & very happy family by which I am receiv'd with unaffected Sincerity" (Faulkner 1985, 16).