cloud-ridden
English
Adjective
cloud-ridden (comparative more cloud-ridden, superlative most cloud-ridden)
- Full of clouds.
- 1915, F. Tennyson Jesse, “A Garden Enclosed”, in Beggars on Horseback, London: Heinemann, page 168:
- We saw the sea-grey slopes of olive-trees
Blown foamy-pale, from the cloud-ridden air
Fell the swift shadows on those leafy seas.
- 1987, José Saramago, translated by Giovanni Pontiero, Baltasar and Blimunda, Orlando: Harcourt, page 130:
- […] He then looks up at the cloud-ridden sky, one great sombre plaque, the colour of slate, he tells her, If wills are dark clouds, perhaps, they’re trapped in these thick, black clouds shutting out the sun […]
- During which the sky is full of clouds.
- 1995, Ardath Mayhar, chapter 2, in Hunters of the Plains, The Borgo Press, published 2008, page 15:
- The bright morning had turned into a cloud-ridden noon.
- Covered or obscured by clouds.
- 1885, “Bogota”, in Harper’s New Monthly Magazine, volume 71, number 421, page 49:
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