Dictionary entry

Cloy

Webster's Dictionary 1913

Cloy (kloi), v. t. [imp. & p. p.Cloyed (kloid); p. pr. & vb. n.Cloying.] [OE. cloer to nail up, F. clouer, fr. OF. clo nail, F. clou, fr. L. clavus nail. Cf. 3d Clove.] 1. To fill or choke up; to stop up; to clog.

The duke's purpose was to have cloyed the harbor by sinking ships, laden with stones.

Speed.

2. To glut, or satisfy, as the appetite; to satiate; to fill to loathing; to surfeit.

cloy the hungry edge of appetite

By bare imagination of a feast?

Shak.

He sometimes cloys his readers instead of satisfying.

Dryden.

3. To penetrate or pierce; to wound.

Which, with his cruel tusk, him deadly cloyed.

Spenser.

He never shod horse but he cloyed him.

Bacon.

4. To spike, as a cannon. Johnson.

5. To stroke with a claw. Shak.