Synonyms for poky


Grammar : Adj
Spell : poh-kee
Phonetic Transcription : ˈpoʊ ki


Définition of poky

Origin :
  • also pokey, 1828, "confined, pinched, shabby," later (1856) "slow, dull;" from varied senses of poke (v.) + -y (2). Also cf. poke (n.3). Related: Pokily; pokiness.
  • adj cramped
Example sentences :
  • I wouldn't have you go prowling about this poky old place for anything.
  • Extract from : « Thankful's Inheritance » by Joseph C. Lincoln
  • But I'm due in a poky little place in Massachusetts called Enderby.
  • Extract from : « Elsie Marley, Honey » by Joslyn Gray
  • The children are behaving as well as can be, and Sykes too; and it's not a poky house, by any means.
  • Extract from : « Sarah's School Friend » by May Baldwin
  • We never have parties in Tideshead, except at the vestry in the winter; and they're so poky.
  • Extract from : « Betty Leicester » by Sarah Orne Jewett
  • But you just swallow it all, and then you get to be so poky a body has no comfort in life.
  • Extract from : « The Faith Doctor » by Edward Eggleston
  • So it did not seem at all a poky or stuffy house though it was so small.
  • Extract from : « My New Home » by Mary Louisa Molesworth
  • “I can't help it, mamma; Battles is slow and poky,” he fumed.
  • Extract from : « Five Little Peppers at School » by Margaret Sidney
  • One hundred and thirty pounds a year for this poky little hole?
  • Extract from : « A Simpleton » by Charles Reade
  • The miserable weeks went on, in the poky house crammed with children.
  • Extract from : « The Rainbow » by D. H. (David Herbert) Lawrence
  • He had not been solemn and poky, as she had prophesied, and the fact nettled her.
  • Extract from : « Six Girls » by Fannie Belle Irving

Antonyms for poky

Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019