From an recent quote: “Upon being questioned in Demon's dungeon, Marina, laughing trillingly, wove a picturesque tissue of lies

JM: Marina’s operatic laughing became adverbial (“trillingly”) and, for my ears,  surprising. It would have passed unnoticed by me had it not been isolated in one of AS’s selections.

I skimmed through ADA, curious about its adjectives (iridal, for example, as heavy as  TOoL’s “auroral ) and adverbs, but I chose a short-story (First Love) for an initial sampling.

How about ”Westinghousian”? (”Presently, the train stopped with a long-drawn Westinghousian sigh.”) Are we thinking of steam engines only? Electric appliances such as those ancient rumbling fridges*?

What is uncommon and exciting in “drably” and “waggly”? 

I knew that those people had come all the way from Paris in their blue-and-yellow limousine (a fashionable adventure in those days) but had drably sent Colette with her dog and governess by an ordinary coach train. The dog was a female fox terrier with bells on her collar and a most waggly behind.”

…………………………………………………………………………………….

* - and he pants and he gasps and he rasps and he wheezes:

ice is the solid form when the water freezes;

[  ] and I wonder how long

it will rumble and shudder and crackle and pound…”

(1942, The Refrigerator Awakes)

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