wingy

wingy

(ˈwɪŋɪ)
adj, wingier or wingiest
1. having wings
2. soaring, fanciful, or airy
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 ?
Boro boss Pulis admitted: "I kept Wingy on - I should have brought him off.
KERNOT -WILLIAM CHARLES ELY (Wingy), September 15, 2018.
They were: Crom and Korps (both from Leamington), Skank, Wingy and Zooki (all from Birmingham), CoLoR, Paw and Foundry (all from Shef-field), Hush (London), Oner (Dublin), Spzero76 (Bristol), Reko (Cambridge), Curly (Darwen), Georgie (Bristol), Skema (Walsall), N4T4, Apps, Dynamix and Num3 (all from the Midlands) and YSK (Italy).
"But the most thrilling event was the delayed parachute jump from 3,000 feet by the one-armed expert Wyndham (Wingy).
No, He dances on; the world is his, The sunshine and his wingy hat; His eyes are round Beneath the brim: To merely dance where he is found Is fate to him And he was born for that.
Before he jetted back to Japan, The Sin Bin sat down with 'Wingy' to talk about his journey to becoming a duel international and all things NRL...
The composer, Joe Garland, was critically influenced by 'Tar Paper Stomp' written and recorded by the New Orleans bandleader Joseph 'Wingy' Manone in 1930.
Nearby, bands led by white trumpeters Louis Prima and Wingy Manone were able to attract audiences at the Famous Door and Hickory House by incorporating Louis Armstrong's trumpet and vocal stylings as their own and constructing a nebulous racial persona for themselves based on Italian-American heritage, their New Orleans backgrounds, and their application of black jazz tradition to their performance styles.
Ian Wills (AKA Wingy) with a Fender guitar at 'The Wall' at the Professional Music Technology shop in near Birmingham city centre
But it is believed to have been written by jazz trumpeter Wingy Manone in the late 1920s who, it is said, was paid by Miller's record company not to contest copyright.
On tour in the UK he has accompanied such American greats as Alton Purnell, Thomas Jefferson, Louis Nelson, Wallace Davenport and Wingy Manone.