windy
Webster 1828
WINDY, adjective 1. Consisting of wind; as a windy tempest.2. Next the wind; as the windy side.3. Tempestuous; boisterous; as windy weather.4. Puffy; flatulent; abounding with wind.5. Empty; airy; as windy joy.WIND, verb transitive preterit tense and participle passive wound. [G.]1. To blow; to sound by blowing or inflation.Wind the shrill horn.2. To turn; to move, or cause to turn.To turn and wind a fiery Pegasus.3. To turn round some fixed object; to bind, or to form into a ball or coil by turning; as, to wind thread on a spool; to wind thread into a ball; to wind a rope into a coil.4. To introduce by insinuation. The child winds himself into my affections.They have little arts and dexterities to wind in such things into discourse.5. To change; to vary.Were our legislature vested in the prince, he might wind and turn our constitution at his pleasure.6. To entwist; to enfold; to encircle.7. [With I short, as in win.] To nose; to perceive or to follow by the scent; as, hounds wind an animal.8. To ventilate; to expose to the wind; to winnow.To wind off, [with I long.] To unwind.To wind out, to extricate.To wind up, 1. To bring to a small compass, as a ball of thread.2. To bring to a conclusion or settlement; as, to wind up ones affairs.3. To put in a state of renovated or continued motion.Fate seemd to wind him up for fourscore years.To wind up a clock, is to wind the cord by which the weights are suspended, round an axis or pin.To wind up a watch, is to wind the spring round its axis or pin.4. To raise by degrees.Thus they wound up his temper to a pitch--5. To straiten, as a string; to put in tune.6. To put in order for regular action.WIND, verb intransitive 1. To turn; to change.So swift your judgments turn and wind.2. To turn around something; as, vines wind around a pole.3. To have a circular direction; as winding stairs.4. To crook; to bend. The road winds in various places.5. To move round; as, a hare pursued turns and winds.To wind out, to be extricated; to escape.Long labring underneath, ere they could wind out of such prison.WINDER, noun One who winds