[
UK
/bˈɒski/
]
ADJECTIVE
-
covered with or consisting of bushes or thickets
brushy undergrowth
`bosky' is a literary term
a bosky park leading to a modest yet majestic plaza
How To Use bosky In A Sentence
- Everything, including the perimeter car parking bays, is subtly brought together by Livingston Eyre's landscaping that knits into the bosky suburban setting.
- A sprig each of borage and mint is optional but adds some pleasing herby, bosky overtones.
- It all looks so 1980s, a bosky equivalent of the red braces and conspicuous-consumption Porsches and Ferraris.
- Wesselmann's roughly 2-by-3-foot graphite drawing of an uninhabited, full-frontal Volkswagen in a bosky landscape, Drawing for Landscape #2, recalls the confident hand of Rivers.
- In bosky little corners of England, tucked away down country lanes and suburban cul-de-sacs, are the remnants of pioneering experiments in modern living.
- There was a sprinkling of roadside crosses and the bocage, the thick hedges along the roadsides, could hardly have been more bosky.
- a bosky park leading to a modest yet majestic plaza
- Cities - especially grand metropolises in the making - are not meant to be bosky dells.
- After that, roaring around the damp and bosky Berkshire lanes on the BMW certainly made Posy feel better. TICKLED PINK
- To the west, rooms are much more conventional, with cantilevered steel balconies and a vista over the local car park (but beyond that to a bosky suburb).