flecky

flecky

(ˈflɛkɪ)
adj, fleckier or fleckiest
covered in or full of flecks or spots
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in classic literature ?
Can she make your real flecky paste, as melts in your mouth, and lies all up like a puff?
[...] I have turned to the ocean when remembering only me and after I left the shore behind, I seemed to shrink and shrink till I was nothing but a flecky bubble and feared that the bubble would burst.
He told MailSport: "The Scotland manager will probably watch the derby to see how Fletch, Baz and Flecky are getting on.
Interestingly, both these works are rooted in nature, and La Barca indeed reflects something of the flecky impressionism of Debussy's La Mer which has figured so prominently with the CBSO in recent days.
Included are Arturo Araujo, a Colombian priest; Ecuadoran Sammy Chong, professor of fine arts at Boston College; photographer Don Doll, who documents the lives of Dakota Native Americans; and nature photographer Michael Flecky, professor of photography at Creighton University in Omaha, Neb.
(Will be sadly missed, a special man, a special friend, a great Evertonian, RIP) - Dave (Flecky), Janet and Norma.
He's a really good player and I think he'll fill Flecky's role.
Flecky's gone to nick the ball and the boy's put his foot there and gone over.
London, Feb 10 ( ANI ): Natasha Giggs paid a visit to Flecky's Tattoo Studio in Manchester on Wednesday and got a large new tattoo on her back completed.
It's the nearest ground in Britain to the sea and if it's windy the way it has been in the last few days wee Flecky could end up in Norway.
Educators in TR programs should be particularly interested in the promising contributions of service-learning pedagogy in the attainment of disability- and discipline-specific competencies (Gitlow & Flecky, 2005), interdisciplinary expertise (Conners et al., 1996; Insalaco et al., 2007; Monroe et al., 2006), and the ideals of civic engagement (Anderson et al., 1993; Greene, 1998).