English edit

Etymology edit

From hoard +‎ -y.

Adjective edit

hoardy (comparative hoardier or more hoardy, superlative hoardiest or most hoardy)

  1. Tending to hoard; grasping.
    • 1985, Newswatch - Volume 2, page 4:
      An employer dipping his hoardy hands into the pay packets of workers doesn't ever expect an applause.
    • 1997, Country Life - Volume 191, Issues 40-44, page 65:
      I'm not a secretive, hoardy kind of person.
    • 2010, Maxine Kingston, The Fifth Book Of Peace, →ISBN:
      I hadn't wanted glass until George did; then I collected glass. I got hoardy, didn't want to give him the best pieces, though he's the one who knew to see them as beautiful.
    • 2017, Ace Finlay, Ace Jefferson Finlay III, →ISBN:
      We were with P.T. and Charles but then they have to go do something or meet up with someone, so we're inside and she comes up and we talk a little but Zhad's there and being all hoardy of me, and she has to go off, so I think I wished her luck and, that was it, like didn't talk to her again, except maybe briefly in a large group again at the field.