a. U.S. [f. SUDS + -Y.] Consisting of, full of, or characterized by soap-suds.

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1857.  Bangor Daily Whig & Courier, 9 May, 2/4.

        He’s gone! across the sudzy see;
  He’s crost the lakey watter!
To see Jerusha Anjyline;
  Ben Smither’s oldest dawter.

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1871.  Jennie F. Willing, in Sunday-School Jrnl., Dec., 269/1. The poor woman dropped into a chair, and covered her face with her old sudsy apron.

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1884.  G. H. Boughton, in Harper’s Mag., Sept., 528/2. Our string of washers still laving their linen in the sudsy stream.

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1891.  Advance (Chicago), 5 Nov. The steaming, sudsy tub.

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1901.  E. T. Royle, in Munsey’s Mag., XXV. 394/2. There was a pleasant, sudsy cleanliness about the two little rooms.

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