flaily
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Adjective
[edit]flaily (comparative more flaily, superlative most flaily)
- Acting like a flail; flailing.
- 1632, Virgil, translated by John Vicars, The XII Aeneids of Virgil, Book 5:
- At once all furrows plow, the strugling streams
O're all the main gape wide, boile foamie streams,
With flaly-oares and slicing foredecks fierce,
Which through the bustling billows proudly pierce.
- 2016, Alice Clayton, The Cocktail Collection: Wallbanger, Rusty Nailed, and Screwdrivered:
- “I hardly think someone as flaily as you can complain about anything.”
“Flaily? That's not even a word,” I huffed, enjoying his arms around me more than I wanted to admit.
“Flaily, as in, one who flails. […] ”