broody

adj
/ˈbɹuːdi/

Etymology

From Middle English *brody, *brodi, from Old English brōdiġ (“broody”), equivalent to brood + -y. Cognate with German brütig (“broody”).

  1. inherited from brōdiġ
  2. inherited from *brody

Definitions

  1. Of birds

    Of birds: sitting persistently and protectively on a nest, in order to hatch eggs.

    • a broody hen
  2. Of any creature or person

    Of any creature or person: showing an interest in raising young.

  3. Brooding, dwelling upon one's thoughts

    Brooding, dwelling upon one's thoughts; moody.

    • Then, with unshorn beard and matted hair tangled with straw, his clothes smeared with slime of obscene things which are begotten of damp and darkness, his thoughts broody with wrath and revenge, Kynon was marched through the streets[…]
    • He didn't even give me one of his broody looks that gave nothing away about his thoughts at all (except the fact he was broody). He gave me a look I'd never seen on him before. A remorseful one.
    • Peter's doubt in his own leadership grew like fungus on his thoughts. He became broody and snapped at people. He was finding himself more and more behind a closed door. He just needed a break.
  4. + 2 more definitions
    1. Gloomy.

      • Broody clouds hung low against the water. None of this bothered the jBoat sailors, whose nimble craft challenged devilish winds and currents. A pod of twenty-two footers raced and frolicked like ten-year-olds on skateboards.
      • The contrast between broody clouds and condensed sky was startling. Fenn stepped off the path into rough grass to get near one of the church windows and, cupping a hand between brow and glass, peered in. There was an unappealing gloom[…]
      • Nature's suffering under human translation wilful damage ferments the ponds that emerge as broody clouds desperate to sprinkle liquid stardust but their warmth now annexed from holy light on a life form so disassociated from its heaven[…]
    2. A female bird in the condition to incubate eggs

      A female bird in the condition to incubate eggs; a broody hen, duck, etc.

      • There are six broodies in that coop.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for broody. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA