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Answer for the clue "More cozy ", 7 letters:
snugger

Alternative clues for the word snugger

Word definitions for snugger in dictionaries

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
See snug

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
a. (en-comparative of: snug )

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Snug \Snug\, a. [Compar. Snugger ; superl. Snuggest .] [Prov. E. snug tight, handsome; cf. Icel. sn["o]ggr smooth, ODan. sn["o]g neat, Sw. snugg.] Close and warm; as, an infant lies snug. Close; concealed; not exposed to notice. Lie snug, and hear what ...

Usage examples of snugger.

He licked it first and made it fit, though it is snugger than what comes out!

Roadmaster because that embroidered chemise was snugger than I thought, and the last thing in the world I wanted right then was a split seam.

Tellai, releasing his snugger with off-handed ease that showed he was beginning to learn the ropes and anxious to prove it.

He had already noticed that the brick dwelling in which he lived was warmer and snugger than the dead, hollowed-out trees used by the Field Magi.

The wet suit was tight enough that it took effort to straighten both arms, but he thought it could be snugger across the front.

But if they had been in the unmolested discomfort of their unlivable magnificence, their splendor was such as might well reconcile the witness to the superior comfort of a private station in our snugger day.

Olivia had been a snugger fit, and once his penis had popped out of her vagina with an audible sound, like the pop of a champagne cork.

Then he fell again with the monstrosity snugger than ever over his face and neck and head, and he squirmed once and then lay still, and that was when Katherine got to him.

Himself, who had effected the transfer, had pronounced the roof upkeep and the heating bills too much for even the Kinloch coffers, and had negotiated a retreat to a smaller snugger home in what had once been the kitchen wing with living quarters for a retinue of dozens.

Peleg Snuggers, the general utility man of the Hall, had just brought the boys up from Cedarville, to which place they had journeyed from Ithaca on the regular afternoon boat running up Cayuga Lake.

Snuggers had wanted to have his picture taken for some time, to send to a certain girl in Cedarville in whom he was much interested.

Nothing met his view but a garden spade which Peleg Snuggers had been using, and catching this up he ran for Tom as if to lay him low forever.