What's the difference between mealy and medly?

Mealy


Definition:

  • (superl.) Having the qualities of meal; resembling meal; soft, dry, and friable; easily reduced to a condition resembling meal; as, a mealy potato.
  • (superl.) Overspread with something that resembles meal; as, the mealy wings of an insect.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) I will be mealy-mouthed, he repeats, according to translation by my colleague Saeed Kamili Dehghan.
  • (2) Malcolm Turnbull refuses to denounce Trump's travel ban Read more Facebook Twitter Pinterest Turnbull: ‘When I have frank advice to give an American president, I give it privately’ This is not the time for the Australian government to offer mealy-mouthed platitudes about not commenting on the policies of other countries.
  • (3) No mealy-mouthed, "I might have done it a little bit" teary-eyed confessions on Oprah.
  • (4) It is mealy mouthed, offensive and lacking in any acknowledgment of the huge abuse of power and harm caused to my clients".
  • (5) Cue a costly whizz-bang extravaganza of CG-powered set pieces foreshadowed with the odd slab of mealy cod philosophy.
  • (6) Labour's position holds the most obvious risks: it will take subtle speech-writing and iron discipline in television interviews for Ed Balls and Mr Miliband not to sound either defensive about their own criticisms of austerity, or mealy-mouthed about the modest recovery Britain is at last enjoying.
  • (7) Representations of acute current issues facing the queer community are thinner on the ground – don't hold your breath for a studio picture about the murder of a homeless teenage trans sex worker – but let's not be mealy-mouthed.
  • (8) Down the road at Bradbury's butchers, whose shelves heave with haggis, beef links, mealie puddings and clootie dumplings, a few customers have begun to discuss the break-up of the union.
  • (9) The Mail, uncharacteristically cowed, removed the story from its website and, more characteristically, issued a mealy-mouthed apology, insisting the story was published "in good faith" and was written by a writer who has "strong connections with senior members of the Lebanese community".
  • (10) If and when he has made apologies, they are often delivered too late and are mealy-mouthed Ken Livingstone appears incapable of contrition .
  • (11) If and when he has made apologies, they are often delivered too late and are mealy-mouthed, and the worst of all apologies is the one that takes no responsibility for their actions .
  • (12) But given the film-maker clearly enjoys the fascination that surrounds his work, his decision does seem a little mealy-mouthed.
  • (13) When the DNA of mealy bugs carrying B chromosomes (+B:DNA( was compared to the DNA of individuals not possessing Bs (-B:DNA), no significant differences were found using isopycnic centrifugations in CsCl or thermal denaturation analyses.
  • (14) – ebb and surge through a once-in-a-lifetime cast (Gloria Grahame, Lillian Gish, Richard Widmark) in which the doctors are often nuttier than the patients; or Tea And Sympathy, a halting, mealy-mouthed and profoundly dated attempt to deal, however obliquely, with the taboo of homosexuality, here dubbed "unmanliness".
  • (15) The arms exports to Israel must stop.” In a further interview with Channel 4 News, Warsi suggested Cameron had been “mealy-mouthed” over his refusal to say Israel’s actions had been disproportionate.
  • (16) Stocks of mealie meal are needed for families until the next harvest.
  • (17) Indiana governor on defensive over religious law some see as anti-gay Read more The real political mistake was the strength of the RFRA in the first place: rather than a mealy-mouthed statutory reminder of the constitutional right to religion without government interference to placate a loud minority, it boldly delineates the mechanisms of unaccountable discrimination on a citizen-by-citizen basis and dangerously reminds the rest of us of the control that Christian bigots have had over American society from day one until the present.
  • (18) She says some “became activists in the leadership contest ... (and) that’s not their job as journalists.” She also used the conversation with Martin to deliver a hard flick at radio talkback host Alan Jones – the broadcaster who declared Gillard’s father had “died of shame.” Gillard says Jones delivered only a “mealy mouthed apology” for the infelicitous outburst, and he only delivered that because of commercial pressure.
  • (19) These issues are far too serious for us to have been mealy-mouthed and for us to be dragging our heels.” Warsi was known to have been unhappy with Cameron’s failure to unequivocally condemn Israel’s incursion into Gaza or the mounting death toll.
  • (20) All right, some of us have banged on for decades about this horrid, mealy-mouthed, catch-all word, hoping to limit its use.

Medly


Definition:

  • (v. t.) See Medle.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The absence of MGMT activity in D425 Med and D458 Med is likely due to the absence of the protein, resulting from a lack of transcription of the MGMT gene.
  • (2) Photoprotection by constitutive and facultative pigmentation is reviewed with minimum erythema dose (MED) as the end point.
  • (3) With each method there is an individual optimal light dose of 1--2 MED that gives healing.
  • (4) No increase in transepidermal water loss, indicating damage to the epidermal barrier, could be recorded by evaporimetry except on the area irradiated with 3 MED of UVB, where 4 subjects showed a moderate increase after 2 weeks.
  • (5) London aided Ankara by closing down the Kurdish TV station, MED-TV, in the same month that BAE Systems, Britain's largest arms company, struck an arms deal with Turkey.
  • (6) These results suggest that the MED is not an accurate method to determine protection against UV-induced immunologic damage.
  • (7) Death in the Med prompted 2,000 calls to the BBC, a quarter of them part of a lobby organised by the Palestine Solidarity Campaign website.
  • (8) The calmodulin-dependent guanylate cyclase of Tetrahymena pyriformis was shown previously to be localized in surface membranes (ciliary and pellicular membranes) (Kudo, S, Nakazawa, K, Nagao, S & Nozawa, Y, Japan j exp med 52 (1952) 193) [21], whereas in a recent report Schultz et al, (Schultz, J E, Schonefeld, U & Klumpp, S, Eur j biochem 137 (1983) 89) [12] demonstrated the localization of this enzyme in ciliary membrane, arguing against its presence in pellicular membrane.
  • (9) The tumor frequency increased 8.5-fold after the drug was discontinued (New Engl J Med 318: 1633-1637, 1988).
  • (10) The MMD was greater than the corresponding MED for individuals of all JST classes.
  • (11) Part 1 of this two-part series in clinical pharmacokinetics (J Natl Med Assoc 1985; 77:475-482) introduced the clinician to the basic principles required for rational therapeutic drug management at the bedside.
  • (12) A novel computer-aided receptor modeling method, REMOTEDISC [J. Med.
  • (13) Perfusion of normal rat kidneys with 5% human albumin in a balanced salt solution bubbled with oxygen yielded medullipin I (Med I) in the renal venous effluent.
  • (14) Constitutional skin color was also not a good predictor of the measured MED and MMD values but did appear to correlate with the steepness of the dose-response curves for erythema and for pigmentation.
  • (15) Stages examined were 3-5 wk (prior to reinnervation, no-re), 5-6 wk (low-re), 9-10 wk (med-re), and 9 mo (long-re, preceding paper) after nerve section.
  • (16) Med I is a promising therapeutic agent for hypertension.
  • (17) To test whether these pathological properties are caused by a primary Schwann cell defect, nerves were transplanted from MED and wildtype (WT) animals onto WT recipients.
  • (18) P536, a UDP-glucose analog which was previously described as an antiviral agent (M. J. Camaraza, P. Fernández Resa, M. T. García López, F. G. de las Heras, P. P. Mendez-Castrillón, B. Alarcón, and L. Carrasco, J. Med.
  • (19) Color of untanned skin and hair were also independent predictors, and were included in the final prediction rule, which correlated 0.55 with MED.
  • (20) Electrical stimulation of two brain stem regions in the decerebrate neonatal rat brain--the mesencephalic locomotor region (MLR) and the medioventral medulla (MED)--were found to elicit rhythmic limb movements in the hind-limb-attached, in vitro, brain stem-spinal cord preparation.

Words possibly related to "mealy"

Words possibly related to "medly"