funkiness


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funk·y 1

 (fŭng′kē)
adj. funk·i·er, funk·i·est
Frightened; panicky.

[From funk.]

funk·y 2

 (fŭng′kē)
adj. funk·i·er, funk·i·est
1.
a. Having a moldy or musty smell: funky cheese; funky cellars.
b. Having a strong, unpleasant odor, especially the odor of the unwashed human body: a funky locker room.
2. Music
a. Having a style reminiscent of simple blues; bluesy.
b. Of or relating to funk music.
3. Slang
a. Hearty and simple: "At the opposite end of Dallas's culinary spectrum is funky regional fare" (Jacqueline Friedrich).
b. Having an unsophisticated or old-fashioned charm; quaint or unpretentious: a funky beach town.
c. Unconventional or eccentric; offbeat or odd: "a bizarre, funky [hotel] dressed up as a ship, with mock portholes and mirrored ceilings over the beds" (Ann Louise Bardach).

[funk + -y.]

funk′i·ness n.
Word History: When asked which words in the English language are the most difficult to define precisely, a lexicographer would surely mention funky. Linguist Geneva Smitherman has tried to capture the meaning of this word in Talkin and Testifyin: The Language of Black America, where she explains that funky means "[related to] the blue notes or blue mood created in jazz, blues, and soul music generally, down-to-earth soulfully expressed sounds; by extension [related to] the real nitty-gritty or fundamental essence of life, soul to the max." Funky, derived from the noun funk, "strong smell, stink," originally meant simply "smelling strong or musty," and could be used to describe body odor. The use of funky to describe jazz and other genres of music was nicely explained by historian and critic Eric Hobsbawm (writing under the pseudonym F. Newton) in 1959 in The Jazz Scene: "Critics are on the search for something a little more like the old, original, passion-laden blues: the trade-name which has been suggested for it is 'funky' (literally: 'smelly,' i.e. symbolizing the return from the upper atmosphere to the physical, down-to-earth reality)."
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

funkiness

(ˈfʌŋkɪnəs)
n
the state or quality of being funky
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
Translations
References in periodicals archive ?
PS20,130 Kia Stonic 3 Just like the VW, funkiness is available.
"It's the funkiness of Baltimore, the row house living, the great park system, the fact that Baltimore is an arts hub in the national underground arts scene.
The beef the steak had was a background funkiness that was appealing and rich.
The upbeat funkiness of the first two tracks drops with a smooth and jazzy Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas featuring singer and bassist Esperanza Spalding and this continues with the rich and bluesy Merry Christmas Baby.
The upbeat funkiness of the first two tracks drops with a smooth and jazzy Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas, featuring singer and bassist Esperanza Spalding and this continues with the rich and bluesy Merry Christmas Baby.
upbeat funkiness of the first tracks drops with a smooth jazzy Have Yourself A Merry Christmas.
"When it comes to finding a running mate for these stinky cheeses, I like to look for beers fermented with Brettanomyces, a wild yeast that lends an earthy, rustic funkiness that complements washed-rind funk," Bernstein says.
There's some exterior colour and dashboard inserts that help spice up the interior level of funkiness.
"While you might think there's little difference in the TLC she gets every other season, ob-gyns note that summer is especially important to pay attention to any symptoms, changes, and funkiness you notice south of the border," it says.
Using both traditional soft pastels and oil pastels, which have a heavier, less powdery consistency, the artist layers her densely packed and interfusing marks to build elaborate surfaces, sometimes achieving a delicious funkiness; among the work's strengths is how its color feels so inextricable from its facture.
And last year, Salida chucked a bit of its down-home funkiness for a more futuristic project--a new tiny-home development called River View at Cleora, which is slated for 200 tiny homes on or near the river.
A veritable diorama of late-19th century brick-and-stone architecture (much of the city was destroyed in an 1866 fire), Portland is extremely compact and walkable, and its locals embody a combination of artsy funkiness and down-to-earth ruggedness (the city's motto is Resurgam, which means "I will rise again" in Latin).