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  1. The earliest known use of the adjective musty is in the Middle English period (1150—1500). OED's earliest evidence for musty is from 1492, in the writing of J. Ryman. musty is of uncertain origin.

  2. What does the adjective musty mean? There is one meaning in OED's entry for the adjective musty. See ‘Meaning & use’ for definition, usage, and quotation evidence

  3. Oct 8, 2024 · Of attitudes, ideas, writing, or other abstract things: no longer fresh or interesting; outdated, stale. Synonym: outmoded. An antiquarie is an honest man, for he had rather scrape a piece of copper out of the durt, than a crowne out of Plodion's standish. I know manie wise gentlemen of this mustie vocation,

  4. Sep 20, 2011 · It has more than 200 definitions in the OED, organised thus: To cause to sit, seat; to be seated, sit. To sink, descend. To put in a definite place (the manner of the action being implied either in the verb itself or in the context). To place or cause to be in a position, condition, relation, or connection.

  5. Verb (head) to do with certainty; (indicates that the speaker is certain that the subject will have executed the predicate) If it has rained all day, it must be very wet outside. You picked one of two, and it wasn't the first: it must have been the second. The children must be asleep by now. You must arrive in class on time.

  6. There were sun-soaked Italian hill towns; a sleepy Portuguese fishing village; a musty, centuries-old timber church in Romania. I saw it all from my couch, or sometimes the faded hammock on the porch. Time.com, 26 July 2020. Cupcakes, grass and musty farmyard smells represent characters in the children’s story The Gruffalo. BBC News, 16 March ...

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  8. MUSTY definition: 1. smelling unpleasantly old and slightly wet: 2. smelling unpleasantly old and slightly wet: 3…. Learn more.

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