seedly

Etymology
From.

Adjective

 * 1)  Of, like, or relating to seeds; producing or bearing seeds; seedy.
 * 2) * 1992, Baltasar Gracian, wit, and the Baroque Age: a rhetorical study:
 * Another friend made all this explanation more detailed and informative: she added that a kiwi also looked, tasted, and was shaped like the prickly pear; she considered other details such as their sharing a seedly flesh, and their enhanced ...
 * 1) * 1916, Southern pharmaceutical journal:
 * After examining the contents the chemist replied: "Why, this is iron Pyrites, commonly known as fool's gold." "What is it worth?" asked the seedly individual. "Oh, about $4.00 a ton in car lots." "Just my luck," exclaimed the questioner.
 * 1) * 1916, Southern pharmaceutical journal:
 * After examining the contents the chemist replied: "Why, this is iron Pyrites, commonly known as fool's gold." "What is it worth?" asked the seedly individual. "Oh, about $4.00 a ton in car lots." "Just my luck," exclaimed the questioner.
 * After examining the contents the chemist replied: "Why, this is iron Pyrites, commonly known as fool's gold." "What is it worth?" asked the seedly individual. "Oh, about $4.00 a ton in car lots." "Just my luck," exclaimed the questioner.