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[ UK /pˈə‍ʊzi/ ]
NOUN
  1. an arrangement of flowers that is usually given as a present

How To Use posy In A Sentence

  • Posy leaned her elbows on the scrubbed wooden draining board, letting the suds slither up her arms, and shook her head. TICKLED PINK
  • Posy produced the triplicate book, still having no idea what she'd delivered. TICKLED PINK
  • Shortly after 10.30 am a woman neighbour asked the policeman standing guard at the scene to put a posy of flowers on the pathway of the dead man's home.
  • He talked for the next ten minutes about the bauble, making a humorous translation of its Latin 'posy,' and describing in the same vein the service to a foreign state that had won him the recognition. The Convert
  • But instead of finding it overgrown with weeds, a pretty posy of artificial flowers stood on the well-groomed plot.
  • Posy's steel toecap made contact with something soft and squashy on the floor. TICKLED PINK
  • So you're either going to love it or find it too posy for words.
  • That'd tie in with everything we've got in place so far... Letting Off Steam...' Posy clutched at his arm. TICKLED PINK
  • Grabbing Posy's arm she pulled her through the bead curtain. TICKLED PINK
  • The competition for the AGM will be for a posy of flowers.
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