See also: bed-wettingly

English

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Etymology

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From bedwetting +‎ -ly.

Adverb

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bedwettingly (comparative more bedwettingly, superlative most bedwettingly)

  1. Alternative form of bed-wettingly.
    • 1993, “Crazy dog”, in Woroni, volume 45, number 3, Acton, Canberra: Australian National University, page 28, column 4:
      A rumbling bassline and Jerry Cantrell’s blunderbuss of a voice are chained to Big Guitar Sounds to curiously strong effect. It’s bedwettingly exciting and faintly silly at the same time; therefore it must be truly brilliant.
    • 1993 April 9, Chris Rundle, “Too much of Tony . . .”, in Western Daily Press, Temple Way, Bristol, page 7:
      Here Tony is unconvincingly cast as a comprehensive school teacher who through some tortuous contrivance ends up as an unwitting, and apparently unwilling, gigolo. Source of much amusement to the studio audience, but not so bedwettingly funny for the rest of us.
    • 1999 January 15, Andrew Losowski, “Weird as well as wonderful”, in Coventry Evening Telegraph, Coventry, page 36, column 4:
      What followed was a brilliant, surreal, bedwettingly funny routine by comedian Simon Munnery in the guise of a geeky wannabe dictator, master of 99 languages, inventor of 98 languages, with his own far out logic.