English

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Etymology

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From fusion +‎ -y.

Adjective

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fusiony (not comparable)

  1. (informal) Containing elements of fusion music.
    • 2007 May 18, “The Treatment”, in Chicago Reader[1]:
      There are also some new faces, like Laetitia Sadier of Stereolab and Jay Israelson of the new wavey psych-pop collective Lansing-Dreiden, but they don't change the sound much: more organic and melodic than most post-rock, Pierce's music is essentially fusiony electric-acoustic pop, its jazzy drums and shimmering flamenco guitars rushing along with the cool momentum of illbient electronica or IDM.
    • 1994 October 14, Peter Margasak, “Spot Check”, in Chicago Reader[2]:
      Their overblown debut, Ling (Giant/Mechanic), mixes fusiony fretless bass playing (by Salls), prog rock precision, effects-heavy guitar, and pristine vocal harmonies with simpy melodies and wretched lyrics.
  2. (informal) Containing elements of fusion cooking.