lullful

English

Etymology

From lull + -ful.

Adjective

lullful (comparative more lullful, superlative most lullful)

  1. (of a sound, rare) Soothing; producing a calming or relaxed feeling
    • 1982, Ivan Doig, The Sea Runners, page 133:
      Everything flat, discreet, lullful.
    • 1996, James Clarence Mangan, ‎Jacques Chuto, Poems, volume 2, page 159:
      A song to the rose, the Summer's daughter! —
      The lullful music of Teegreez' flow []

See also

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.