Citations:blossomest

Adjective: "an irregular superlative form of blossomy"

 * 1871 — Myron B. Benton, "A Midwinter-Day", Appletons' Journal of Literature, Science and Art, 25 February 1871, page 227:
 * I fancy that, in the vital kernel of that inanimate ball of fur, which Audubon says he rolls himself into, he is all the while dreaming the sweetest of dreams — living in the rankest, blossomest, honeyest clover, fenced about with delightful tumbled-down stone-walls,
 * 1950 — Judson Crews, A Poet's Breath, Motive Book Shop (1950), unknown page:
 * The winter that strikes the blossomest season
 * is the one most dreaded for wanton destruction
 * 1994 — Dennis Potter, 15 March 1994, an interview with Melvyn Bragg. Broadcast by Channel 4 on 5 April 1994
 * ... instead of saying "Oh that's nice blossom" ... looking at it through the window when I'm writing, I see it is the whitest, frothiest, blossomest blossom that there ever could be, and I can see it.

Verb: "(archaic) second-person singular simple present form of blossom"

 * 1840 — Francis Hastings Doyle, "To —", in Miscellaneous Verses, Blatch and Lampert (1840), page 50:
 * Like some young flower, thou blossomest,
 * Without a fear on earth;
 * 1847 — George J. O. Allman, "On the Sea-Shore", The New Monthly Belle Assemblée, October 1847, page 218:
 * While yet is cold and drear the wintry Earth
 * Thou blossomest — and on thy cheek so pale,
 * 1851 — "Literature and Science", Allen's Indian Mail, 17 June 1851, page 359:
 * Sometimes thou blossomest as a lovely flower, or thou art a bee and goest thy way buzzing;
 * 1861 — J. T. Burgess, Life Scenes and Social Sketches: A Book for English Hearths and Homes, W. Kent & Co. (1861), page 33:
 * You live and you die — cold winter is your tomb; but, when spring comes, with its genial showers, and dissolves thy bonds, thou arisest and blossomest more sweetly than before.
 * 1897 — John B. Tabb, "An April Bloom", in Lyrics, Boston Copeland and Day (1897), page 102:
 * Till now, as Nature's pulses move,
 * Thou blossomest, a breath of Love,
 * 1900 — Norman Gale, "To a Robin", The Literary World, 21 December 1900:
 * With breast like a rose on the coping
 * Thou blossomest, sturdily hoping
 * 1907 — Louis M. Elshemus, "Mollie", in All About Girls: Unpoetical and Poetical Maidens, Eastman Lewis (1907), page 163:
 * That blossomest above the calm Pacific's beach
 * 1987 — Rabindra Nath Sarkar, The Latest Revelation in the East, Saksrit Pustak Bhandar (1987), page 58:
 * And, the more thou blossomest the more my ego meets with the quintessence of its true meaning.