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Racy   /rˈeɪsi/   Listen
Racy

adjective
(compar. racier; superl. raciest)
1.
Full of zest or vigor.  Synonym: lively.
2.
Marked by richness and fullness of flavor.  Synonyms: full-bodied, rich, robust.  "Full-bodied wines" , "A robust claret" , "The robust flavor of fresh-brewed coffee"
3.
Suggestive of sexual impropriety.  Synonyms: blue, gamey, gamy, juicy, naughty, risque, spicy.  "Blue jokes" , "He skips asterisks and gives you the gamy details" , "A juicy scandal" , "A naughty wink" , "Naughty words" , "Racy anecdotes" , "A risque story" , "Spicy gossip"
4.
Designed or suitable for competing in a race.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Racy" Quotes from Famous Books



... constantly in the public eye. Her house, during the hours at any rate in which her boy was at school, was little else than a halting-place between two journeys. Visits to the poor, long watches by the sick; committees, in which her racy breadth of character gave her always an important place; discussions with the vicar, arguments with the curates, a chat with this person and a walk with that—these were the incidents and occupations which filled her day. Life was ...
— Robert Elsmere • Mrs. Humphry Ward

... more important part in our literary world. 'The Australasian', 'Sydney Mail' and 'Queenslander' have done a good deal to encourage local writers, but the most powerful influence has been that of 'The Bulletin', started in Sydney in 1880. Its racy, irreverent tone and its humour are characteristically Australian, and through its columns the first realistic Australian verse of any importance — the writings of Henry Lawson and A. B. Paterson — became widely known. When published in book form, their verses met with phenomenal success; ...
— An Anthology of Australian Verse • Bertram Stevens

... usual racy style Phoebe Couzins concluded her description by saying: "It seems very strange that when you are not about, things generally break loose and no woman can be found who unites the moderation, brains and common sense necessary to carry matters to a respectable conclusion. ...
— The Life and Work of Susan B. Anthony (Volume 1 of 2) • Ida Husted Harper

... proved that you've got the goods," declared Campbell, senior. "If you do as well in the big game I might be favorable toward giving you that racy runabout you've been nagging ...
— The Mark of the Knife • Clayton H. Ernst

... his legs on the thick buffalo-skin which served as a rug to his cosy dining-room fire-place. "I'll continue the narrative as old Short told it to me, though not exactly in his own words, for those I cannot pretend to repeat—I cannot even hope to imitate his quaint expressions and racy humour. Noggin stood the attacks of his tormentors with as much heroism as could the most stoical of red warriors. We longed to rush in to his rescue, but we knew full well that the attempt would be worse than useless, and we should inevitably lose our own lives and not save his. ...
— Dick Onslow - Among the Redskins • W.H.G. Kingston


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