topplesome
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Adjective
[edit]topplesome (comparative more topplesome, superlative most topplesome)
- Characterised or marked by toppling
- 1895, Margaret Harriet Matthews, Dame Prism:
- There you are, Button," she said, quite naturally, with a little laugh, "and here am I, and I've been dreaming we and the rest were off among the stars in chase of a fly-away canary, in a dreadfully topplesome breeze-blown shallop, that, now I am awake and think of it, must have been the 'wooden shoe.'
- 1998, Mid-American Review, (Please provide the book title or journal name):
- In this case, it was a towerlike and topplesome sixteen-ouncer that brought a fresh unrest not to the kitchen table (how could I eat?), but to an outlying one, a step table, a side table, the one I strewed with my collectings, my pertainings, [...]