English

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Etymology

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From scone +‎ -y.

Adjective

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sconey (comparative more sconey, superlative most sconey)

  1. Resembling or characteristic of a scone.
    • 2010, Alan Goldsher, Paul Is Undead: The British Zombie Invasion, Gallery Books, →ISBN, pages 29–31:
      I spit out the sconey thing into my hand and placed it gently on the floor—moving very quickly, of course, so Paul wouldn’t bleed out—then did the usual tongue up past the ear and to the brain, and get the brain juice, blah, blah, blah.
    • 2018, Steffanie Holmes, “Rowan's Super-Fluffy English Scones with Jam and Cream”, in Hungry for More: A Harem of Recipes, Peryton Press, →ISBN:
      This coats the flour in the butter so it turns into sconey goodness.
    • 2021, Jenny Kane, Winter Fires at Mill Grange, Aria, →ISBN:
      Taking in a mutual inhalation of sconey aroma, they burst out laughing.