mouldy• This pizza's so old it's gone mouldy!• Wait a little longer and the brown turns to black; this means the flesh has become bruised or mouldy.• A few mouldybones break the surface of the water here and there.• We looked at some mouldybread and started to wonder how the mould first got there.• There were dozens of emptytins too, soup and bakedbeans, all mixed together with dozens of mouldy bread wrappers.• The paint surface grew a little cracked and mouldy, but nothing else seemed to be happening.• All there was in the fridge was a piece of mouldycheese and some tomatoes.• Halfstalebuns and mouldymeat.• Greengrasssprouted from the mouldy, neglectedthatchedroofs.• The pocket's all stained and that's mouldy too.
go mouldy• Throw that bread away. It's gone mouldy.• Any nuts they leave in their feedbox eventually go mouldy.• Remember too, that a nutgoing mouldy in air has room for the mould to show as fibres or a crust.• Why don't the buried nuts go mouldy or rot?• If left, these tend to go mouldy, so tip them out each day.• If you don't keep cheese in the fridge, it goes mouldy very quickly.