English language

How to pronounce logy in English?

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Type Words
Synonyms dazed, foggy, groggy, stuporous
Derivation loginess

Examples of logy

logy
For all the excitement of that nine-minute horse race, Ben-Hur was long and logy.
From the time.com
Equipment sales have been logy, in part because of last year's snow drought in Europe.
From the time.com
It makes that YouTube synopsis of The Sopranos seem logy by comparison.
From the time.com
So much better than feeling stuffed and logy and convinced I never want to eat another bite.
From the chron.com
Truth to tell, Ben-Hur was long and logy, but it got the actor his finest role in his best film.
From the time.com
Branco has long maintained he felt logy for the rest of the match.
From the nytimes.com
To relieve themselves, fans waved programs, ruffling the logy air and evoking a flock of penguins.
From the straightsets.blogs.nytimes.com
During the first ten or fifteen minutes of our interview he seemed logy and understandably preoccupied.
From the theatlantic.com
The exception is passing at highway speeds, where the TDI feels logy, and the driver must make allowances.
From the timesunion.com
More examples
  • Dazed: stunned or confused and slow to react (as from blows or drunkenness or exhaustion)
  • (loginess) a dull and listless state resulting from weariness
  • -logy is a suffix in the English language, used with words originally adapted from Ancient Greek language ending in ' (-logia). The earliest English examples were anglicizations of the French ', which was in turn inherited from the Latin ''''.
  • (Logies) The TV Week Logie Awards are the Australian television industry awards, which have been presented annually since 1959. ...
  • Slow to respond or react; lethargic
  • (logian) to place, to arrange
  • (Logies) Australian TV awards, some industry-voted and some voted for by readers of TV Week magazine. Rumours of TV stations buying truckloads of TV Weeks for their staff to fill in multiple voting coupons are always rife at Logie time.
  • (LOGIES) internationally regarded awards celebrating excellence in television. [Mr X]
  • (logist) specialist in the study of