From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishlongishlong‧ish /ˈlɒŋɪʃ $ ˈlɒːŋɪʃ/ adjective informal LONGfairly long OPP shortish
Examples from the Corpus
longish• Flapper bathing beauties were well covered, including longish drawers and stockings.• The man with the guitar was dark and smooth-faced, with longish hair, a sensitive mouth.• He wore a cap and a longish mac done up at the neck.• He has high cheekbones, and a longish nose.• You may be able to accommodate this bending by tying in to a longish pergola or trellis on a wall or fence.• Two negative reports, say, over a longish period of time..• They look like crude, longish pine cones, with bracts clearly recognizable as modified leaves.• an artist with longish red hair• He is not much of a talker; a longish sentence for him is um, his standard reply to most questions.