Resembling, containing, or full of draff; like dregs or waste material; worthless or of poor quality.
From 'draff' (Old Norse root meaning waste) plus the adjective suffix '-y,' meaning 'having the quality of' or 'full of.'
Medieval and Renaissance writers used 'draffy' as an insult—Shakespeare himself used similar words to describe something worthless or degraded, showing how brewing terminology became part of everyday colorful language.
Complete word intelligence in one call. Free tier — 50 lookups/day.