cumber-world
Appearance
See also: cumberworld
English
[edit]Noun
[edit]cumber-world (plural cumber-worlds)
- (obsolete) Alternative form of cumberworld
Middle English
[edit]Noun
[edit]cumber-world
- (derogatory) cumberworld; a useless person or thing; someone who is an encumbrance on the world.
- c. 1385, Geoffrey Chaucer, Troilus and Criseyde, lines 279–280:
- I, combre-world, that may of nothyng serve, / But evere dye and nevere fulli sterve.
- (please add an English translation of this quotation)
- c. 1412, Thomas Hoccleve, A Lament for Chaucer, lines 35–38; republished in Henry Spackman Pancoast, John Duncan Ernst Spaeth, editors, Early English Poems[1], New York: Henry Holt and Company, 1911, page 242:
- Thou followedst sure, this men know well enow, / That cumber-world, that thee, my master slow, / I would were slain! death went too hastily / To run on thee, and rive thy life of thee.
- (please add an English translation of this quotation)