English edit

Adjective edit

honied (comparative more honied, superlative most honied)

  1. Alternative spelling of honeyed
    • 1836, William A. Alcott, The Young Mother[1]:
      It must be buttered, or honied, or toasted, or soaked in milk, or dipped in gravy.
    • 1913, John L. Stoddard, Poems[2]:
      One of the pair Is a woman fair, With parted, smiling lips; For her each hour A honied flower, And she the bee that sips.
    • 1903, Ambrose Bierce, Shapes of Clay[3]:
      From the same lips the honied phrases fall That still are bitter from cascades of gall.

Anagrams edit

Middle English edit

Adjective edit

honied

  1. Alternative form of honyed