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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
wiry
adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
man
▪ Foresters passed us, small wiry men carrying machetes and, in one case, a crossbow for shooting birds.
▪ Father Vic was a wiry man in his late forties with a sharp nose and darting, deep-set eyes.
▪ Lou Minton was a wiry man with gaunt, chiseled features and prematurely gray hair, combed straight back.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ a wiry little Broadway show dancer from Puerto Rico
▪ Father Vic was a wiry man in his late forties with a sharp nose and deep-set eyes.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ A thin wiry woman, her name was Meg and not herself the full shilling.
▪ About the only people who can move rapidly over such terrain are the tough and wiry park service hunters.
▪ Foresters passed us, small wiry men carrying machetes and, in one case, a crossbow for shooting birds.
▪ His father, Michael, was a short, wiry, quiet man, a sheet-metal worker.
▪ Richard Cory was a little man with wiry hair.
▪ Short, wiry, and with a dark and rather damaged complexion, he could have been a retired flyweight boxer.
▪ The wiry Estrada flashes a partially capped smile as she gratefully recalls her first maquila job twisting electrical wires with latex-tipped fingers.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Wiry

Wiry \Wir"y\, a. [Written also wiery.]

  1. Made of wire; like wire; drawn out like wire.

  2. Capable of endurance; tough; sinewy; as, a wiry frame or constitution. ``A little wiry sergeant of meek demeanor and strong sense.''
    --Dickens.

    He bore his age well, and seemed to retain a wiry vigor and alertness.
    --Hawthorne.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
wiry

1580s, "made of wire," from wire (n.) + -y (2). As "resembling wire" from 1590s; of persons, "lean, sinewy," by 1808. Related: Wiriness.

Wiktionary
wiry

a. thin, muscular and flexible.

WordNet
wiry
  1. adj. lean and sinewy [syn: stringy]

  2. [also: wiriest, wirier]

Wikipedia
WIRY (AM)

WIRY is an AM radio station licensed to Plattsburgh, New York. The locally owned and operated radio station broadcasts at 1340 kHz in C-QUAM AM stereo into a Valcom whip antenna (one of the only stations to do so) with a full-service variety format.

WIRY is primarily music-formatted, featuring an eclectic variety of formats. The station describes its format as " Adult Contemporary Format, with a careful blend of New Country Hits, As Well As oldie classics from the 50's - present some [ classic country ] as well from time to time during the day." There is also a monthly show devoted to big band music.

WIRY is mostly locally operated. The station has a live local morning show and an extensive local news and sports bureau, carrying the Plattsburgh Cardinals hockey team in winter months and high school sports. The station also has a tradio-style program titled "Swap Shop" and features several creative advertising programs, including a listing of lunch menus from advertisers and a radio help-wanted show titled "Who's Hiring." Weather forecasts are taken from public domain National Weather Service reports.

The station serves as an affiliate for the New York Yankees, New York Giants, NBC News Radio, The Beatle Years with Bob Malik, When Radio Was and The Country Music Greats Radio Show.

In addition, the station also streams on the Internet. It has streamed continuously since prior to 2002 and survived the Internet radio bust that forced many stations to stop streaming at that time.

WIRY

WIRY may refer to:

  • WIRY (AM), a radio station (1340 AM) licensed to serve Plattsburgh, New York, United States
  • WIRY-FM, a radio station (100.7 FM) licensed to serve Plattsburgh West, New York

Usage examples of "wiry".

From a wiry old woman with mud-brown skin, he mastered the botanical secrets of the land, learning how to make curare from strychnos vines, malarial prophylaxes from cinchona bark, barbasco insect repellent, and a topical painkiller from waxy red genipa berries.

West and south stretched a rolling plain, thinly begrown with shrubs not like Terrestrial sagebrush in appearance: low, wiry, silvery-leaved, Due north rose the sheer black wall of Kusulongo the Mountain, jagged against the Milky Way.

A boy still, though approaching manhood rapidly, Bek was small and wiry, but made up for his size with agility and speed and surprising strength.

Wondering at the reason for such a cool reception by the local lawman, Blu studied the shorter man, noting his wiry but well-muscled build and the nervous twitching of the fingers on his right hand.

Unhampered by a buckler Blake took full advantage of the nimbleness of the wiry horse he rode and which he had ridden daily since his arrival in Nimmr, so that man and beast were well accustomed to one another.

He was a lean, wiry figure, barely taller than Bunion, skin as brown and grainy as the bark of a sapling, hair grown thick down the back of his neck and along his arms.

Once inside the main building they were met by a wiry man in a dark-blue plaid wool shirt, jeans, and chukka boots.

Alastair, his steadfast chauffeur and a spry, wiry man for his one hundred years, started complaining as soon as Dagon had asked how things were at the castle.

Stantori and Lester Treadwell, a lean, wiry man in his fifties who was in charge of clearing the deadfall, had taken a four-wheel drive truck up the logging road toward spike camp as soon as it had gotten light.

He had twisted his wiry hair into short dreadlocks, and had never looked better.

Before he knew what had happened, Durk was rolling on the floor of the corridor, his teeth full of wiry black hair, his arms straining to hold a pair of clawlike hands away from his throat.

She was small, wiry, and beautiful, a gladiatrix dressed in leather armor over a coarse tunic.

I pummeled him with one clenched fist, grabbed his sandy wiry hair with my other hand and banged away at him.

A single great tree flourished near the center of the gulch, while tufts of wiry grass were scattered here and there among the rocks of the gravelly floor.

And men began springing to their feet and scrambling out of their shelters, and staring around them and waving their hats and shouting congratulation and encouragement, and ducking suddenly as more bullets came whistling in, and from a low rumble the sound rose to distant thunder, and from that to nearer uproar, and Truman and Cranston made a rush for their own herds, ordering the men to side line and hopple instantly, for the surviving horses were excitedly sniffing the air, pawing and snorting, and then there hove in sight up the valley the wiry leaders of the herd, galloping wearily, behind them a dull, dust-hidden, laboring mass, the main body of the Indian prizes swept away at sunrise.