barbigerous
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Latin barbiger[1] from barba (“beard”) + gerō (“carry, wear”).
Adjective
[edit]barbigerous (comparative more barbigerous, superlative most barbigerous)
- (rare, humorous) Having a beard; bearded; hairy.
- 1810, James Kennedy, Glenochel, Glasgow: R. Chapman, Volume 2, p. 118,[2]
- Profoundly thoughtful looks the sage, / Barbigerous, and priestly mien’d;
- 1972, Saul K. Padover, Karl Marx: An Intimate Biography, New York: McGraw-Hill, Chapter 20, p. 348,[3]
- the author magnificently barbigerous and the publisher elegantly bearded but bald
- 2009, Barry Edelstein, chapter 4, in Bardisms: Shakespeare for All Occasions[4], New York: HarperCollins, pages 123–124:
- […] check out a portrait of the earl and you’ll see on his chin a barbigerous bulk that makes the poor fellow look like an Elizabethan cross between two Sams: Uncle and Yosemite.
- 1810, James Kennedy, Glenochel, Glasgow: R. Chapman, Volume 2, p. 118,[2]