English edit

Etymology edit

sprinkle +‎ -y

Adjective edit

sprinkly (comparative more sprinkly, superlative most sprinkly)

  1. (of precipitation) Light, tending to sprinkle or fall down softly.
    • 2007, Bill Cameron, Lost Dog:
      The rain had tapered off to a sprinkly drizzle, Portland's most prevalent weather condition.
  2. Characterised by sprinkles or sprinkling.
    • 2007, Barton Palmer, Twentieth Century American Fiction on Screen:
      Humbert's first epiphanic vision of Lolita, for example, is rendered in aquatic, dripping, sprinkly slow motion.
  3. Subject to being sprinkled on.
    • 1851, Nathaniel Parker Willis, Hurry-Graphs Or, Sketches of Scenery, Celebrities and Society, Taken from Life:
      I had rather a sprinkly seat in the bow, but, as we bobbed up and down, I had a good backward look at the town, which, with the ascent of mud in the foreground, looked almost set on a hill.
  4. Haphazardly and incompletely distributed.
    • 1967, Allen Freeman Davis, Spearheads for reform: the social settlements and the progressive movement:
      Mary Richmond, general secretary of the Baltimore Organization Society, was disturbed because "under the name of settlement, the old-fashioned mission, distributing a cheap and sprinkly sort of charity, can do more harm than under the right name."
  5. Resembling having been sprinkled with something.
    • 1912, Jean Webster, Daddy-Long-Legs:
      I have it planned exactly what you look like--very satisfactorily--until I reach the top of your head, and then I AM stuck. I can't decide whether you have white hair or black hair or sort of sprinkly grey hair or maybe none at all.
  6. Resembling sprinkles.
    • 2005, Catherine Fox, Bridget Gillespie, Extreme Anglicanism: A Liturgical Guide to the Sporting Year:
      When they are cool, ice them in pretty pastel colours and decorate with interesting sprinkly things. These might include hundreds-and-thousands, sugar flowers, the tops of iced gems (bite the biscuit off first), crystallised violets...
    • 2006, Barbara Kelly, Moose Mug at High Noon:
      Christmas cookies and lemonade I made it safe and sound to my godmother's house in time to frost cookies and dip them in those little sprinkly things...