Adjective used when something is both done in an easier way and more easily done, with more emphasis on how simple and effective this verb is occurring.
Pronounced Eez-Li-Er. A comparative word used to compare people’s relative easiness with respect to sex. This word is more difficult to use when referring to men due to their overall high levels of easiness.
Mike: “I was going to hit on Sue at that party…but her friend Tammy is a lot easilier and I was so drunk I had trouble putting a complete sentence together.”
Fogey/fogy /fougi/ sl. (early 18C+, orig. Scot) old-fashioned, stuck-in-the mud.
Person with old fashioned ideas which he is unwilling to change: Come to the disco and stop being such an old fogey!
You think me an old fogeyand an old tory, his thoughtful voice said. I saw three generations since O’Connel’s time. I remember the famine. Do you know that the orange lodges agitated for repeal of the union twenty years before O’Connel did or before the prelates of your communion denounced him as a demagogue? You fenians forget some things. (James Joyce, Ulysses. PenguinBooks,1992. p. 38)