In 1511, leaders in Mecca believed coffee stimulated radical thinking and outlawed the drink. In 1524, the leaders overturned that order, and people could drink coffee again.
fogged, foggy
(adjective) obscured by fog; “he could barely see through the fogged window”
brumous, foggy, hazy, misty
(adjective) filled or abounding with fog or mist; “a brumous October morning”
bleary, blurred, blurry, foggy, fuzzy, hazy, muzzy
(adjective) indistinct or hazy in outline; “a landscape of blurred outlines”; “the trees were just blurry shapes”
dazed, foggy, groggy, logy, stuporous
(adjective) stunned or confused and slow to react (as from blows or drunkenness or exhaustion)
Source: WordNet® 3.1
foggiest
superlative form of foggy: most foggy
(usually, used in the negative) Slightest, faintest, least.
Source: Wiktionary
Fog"gy, a. [Compar. Foggier; superl. Foggiest.] Etym: [From 4th Fog.]
1. Filled or abounding with fog, or watery exhalations; misty; as, a foggy atmosphere; a foggy morning. Shak.
2. Beclouded; dull; obscure; as, foggy ideas. Your coarse, foggy, drowsy conceit. Hayward.
Source: Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary 1913 Edition
3 July 2025
(noun) the faculty through which the external world is apprehended; “in the dark he had to depend on touch and on his senses of smell and hearing”
In 1511, leaders in Mecca believed coffee stimulated radical thinking and outlawed the drink. In 1524, the leaders overturned that order, and people could drink coffee again.