drooly

drooly

(ˈdruːlɪ)
adj, -lier or -liest
tending to drool
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
Our handpicked delights include the very drooly chocolate brittle, chunky nuggets of almonds hand rolled in rich cocoa powder, and our very tall 20 layered Belgium mousse cake indulged by our esteemed clientele since its inception'.
The cloth napkin that dangled from my mum's hand always brought a drooly smile to his face and we all never got enough of it.
He is small, similar to you, messy, drooly, and stinky, and he cries a lot.
Truly Lovejoy, or Drooly as her brother calls her, tries to stay under the radar.
"They are great after a dog eats or if you have a drooly dog, you can wipe their mouths with it," she said.
It's a bit like kissing one of those big drooly dogs.
Next time you see each other, act friendly (not drooly, not mad, not hurt), and see how he reacts.
The baby bangs his drooly hands on the tray of the high chair.
From Russia there is not much new this time around, though a one-of-a-kind specimen that Brad van Scriver showed me in the Heliodor dealership's room certainly rates a brief, drooly word.
The BBC's Buck House correspondent Jenny Bond (who comes over more royal than the royals) and ITV's Libby Wiener adopted that special gushy, drooly tone.