Definition of "wingy"
wingy
adjective
comparative more wingy, superlative most wingy
(archaic) Winged, or as if winged; inclined to fly.
Quotations
The path that leads, where, hung ſublime, / And ſeen afar, youth's gallant trophies, bright / In Fancy's rainbow ray, invite / His wingy nerves to climb.
1780, James Beattie, “Ode to Hope”, in Poems on Several Occasions, 4th edition, London: […] T. Strahan, T. Crowder, S. Becket, J. Lownds, T. Robinson, G. Clarke, stanza II.I., page 52
—and I ran up and down in the scale of semibreves and minims that I had heard, with the one long, sweet trill transfusing life on earth into heavenly existence, and I felt very wingy, very much as if I could take up the tower, standing high and square out there, and carry it, "like Loretto's chapel, through the air to the green land," where my spirit would go singing evermore.
1862, Various, Atlantic Monthly, Vol. 10, No. 61, November, 1862
The later Pythagoreans and Platonists seem to have believed that the same numerical ethereal body with which the soul was at first created adhered to it inseparably during all its descents into grosser bodies, a lucid and wingy vehicle, which, purged by diet and catharms, ascends again, bearing the soul to its native seat.
1880, William Rounseville Alger, The Destiny of the Soul
noun
plural wingies
(slang) One who has an amputated arm or arms.
Quotations
Although I knew comparatively little of matronship, as such, I did know a great deal of mothering, and for "wingies and stumpies" as they called themselves, the blind and the maimed who had given so much, all the service and devotion of which I was capable was only too little.
2004, Daisy Bates, Peter J. Bridge, My Natives and I, page 154