See also: t-shirty

English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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From T-shirt +‎ -y.

Adjective

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T-shirty (comparative more T-shirty, superlative most T-shirty)

  1. Resembling or characteristic of a T-shirt.
    • 1953 April 8, St. Petersburg Times, volume 69, number 258, St. Petersburg, Fla., page 21:
      FAIR… …T-SHIRTY / Drip Touts Science [] (Temperatures, Weather Map on Page 22)
    • 1965 November 13, Barbara Campbell, “Princess Proves ‘Doll’ For Press Cameramen: Pictures Snapped At Douglas Ranch”, in The Arizona Daily Star, volume 124, number 317, Tucson, Ariz., section B, page one, column 3:
      The elder sister of the Duke of Devonshire was ready for the trip to northern, colder, Page, Ariz., in a thin green nylon T-shirty sweater worn with a magenta and green tweed skirt.
    • 1966 August 16, The News Tribune, 84th year, number 60, Tacoma, Wash., page 6:
      The T-shirty sweater shown below is long sleeved beige knit, ringed with navy-blue.
    • 1966 September 13, Hattiesburg American, volume LXXI, number 216, Hattiesburg, Miss., page 15:
      Two you’ll love to glide along with are the ribby, long-sleeved turtle-neck and the T-shirty style with show-off buttons.

Anagrams

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