Spuz´zy, a. 1. Highly seasoned. Charged with brain-electricity.
Theodore Roosevelt and Kaiser Wilhelm have spuzz. Demiourgos, maker of men, gave them an extra dash of the tabasco. (See Persotude.)
Spuzz in acting, in writing, or in business is what brings in the money.
Spuzz welcomes competition; it is always ready for the fray.
You can’t down the spuzzard; he is elastic, and bounces up after every failure.
The spuzzard is the girl who could “just die dancing.” She answers her letters the day they are received.
The farmer with no spuzz to him can never lift the mortgage; but the spuzzy intensive Italian down the road is educating his sons to be doctors and lawyers.
Spuzz is that getaheadative zip, tang, and racehorse enthusiasm that has for its motto, “Do it now.”
A good Welch rarebit has spuzz; so has a dry Martini—but it’s the wrong kind. (See Looblum.)
How I admire a Suffragette!
No matter what she does,
She has red corpuscles, you bet!
She has a lot of spuzz!