Frothy in a sentence as an adjective

I don't at all see them as the type of company to just grab money in frothy markets.

" \nUnless I misunderstood what you meant by "frothy".

It's bad enough when people go all frothy over iOS vs Android, but over household product brands?

If you're in your 20s or younger, you probably just don't care about Microsoft -- though you might not get why the older folks get so frothy about them.

"I come from a state that raises corn and cotton and cockleburs and Democrats, and frothy eloquence neither convinces nor satisfies me. I am from Missouri.

Frankly, this article is the usual kind of frothy pro-startup blog post that is seen on an extremely regular basis here on hacker news.

This subject makes me frothy mouthed as the commentator has valid concerns, terrible suggestions.

The justification for this frothy valuation is that somehow they will turn the browsers of pictures into buyers of products.

The talent market is going to stay frothy until engineer salaries adjust up to stable equilibrium.

But trying to work it into an anti-government, anti-business narrative just to send nerds into a frothy rage is stupid and counter-productive.

Really the only ignorance I see here is when people issue frothy prophecies of a digital doomsday like this one, simply because the prevailing trend runs counter to their own personal philosophy.

If the market is particularly frothy, investor equity may be overpriced relative to employee stock, or in the more common case where a startup scrapes together a seed round, it may be underpriced.

Plus, Arrington's entire schtick as a startup blogger/investor depends on a frothy startup environment, which another dud IPO--namely Zynga--would directly endanger.

But there is tremendous potential here for an appeal to the frothy Tea-party base of conservatives because there is a lot about NSA surveillance that is contrary to their interests, or at least they would understand so if the message were cast in their language.

If this green frothy diet is nutritionally flawed, it ought to be downright easy for a professional nutritionist to explain why, so Metsovas' reliance on insults and vague generalities ends up trivializing her position and setting up Rhinehart to be the misunderstood genius.

Frothy definitions

adjective

emitting or filled with bubbles as from carbonation or fermentation; "bubbling champagne"; "foamy (or frothy) beer"

See also: bubbling bubbly foaming foamy effervescing spumy

adjective

marked by high spirits or excitement; "his fertile effervescent mind"; "scintillating personality"; "a row of sparkly cheerleaders"

See also: bubbling effervescent scintillating sparkly