English

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Etymology

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From ribbon-y.

Adjective

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ribbony (comparative more ribbony, superlative most ribbony)

  1. Like ribbon.
    • 2008 March 9, Terrence Rafferty, “Man, Godard and Nature (and Bardot, Too)”, in New York Times[1]:
      Jean-Luc Godard’s radiant, ambiguous, serenely perverse “Contempt,” 45 this year, is being revived again, in startling color and elegant, ribbony CinemaScope, for the second time in just over a decade, and it’s beginning to look like one of those movies we can’t do without for very long: a classic.