Definify.com

Webster 1913 Edition


Lubberly

Lub′ber-ly

,
Adj.
Like a lubber; clumsy.
A great
lubberly
boy.
Shakespeare

Lub′ber-ly

,
adv.
Clumsily; awkwardly.
Dryden.

Webster 1828 Edition


Lubberly

LUB'BERLY

,
Adj.
Properly, tall and lank without activity; hence, bulky and heavy; clumsy; lazy; as a lubberly fellow or boy.

LUB'BERLY

,
adv.
Clumsily; awkwardly.

Definition 2024


lubberly

lubberly

English

Adjective

lubberly (comparative more lubberly, superlative most lubberly)

  1. Clumsy and stupid; resembling a lubber (an inexperienced person).
    • Shakespeare
      a great lubberly boy
    • 1693, Thomas Urquhart, translation of Gargantua by Rabelais, Chapter XX:
      Ponocrates and Eudemon burst out in a laughing so heartily, that they had almost split with it, and given up the ghost, in rendering their souls to God: even just as Crassus did, seeing a lubberly ass eat thistles;
  2. Lacking in seamanship; of or suitable to a landlubber who is new to being at sea and unfamiliar with the ways of a sailor.
    • 1848, James Fenimore Cooper, "Captain Spike, Or The Islets of the Gulf", in Bentley's Miscellany , page 19:
      "Do not use such a lubberly expression, my dear Rose, if you respect your father's profession. On a vessel is a new-fangled Americanism, that is neither fish, flesh, nor red-herring, as we sailors say,— neither English nor Greek."

Adverb

lubberly (comparative more lubberly, superlative most lubberly)

  1. In the manner of a landlubber.
    • 1839, Matthew Henry Barker, Hamilton King , page 105:
      I'm not ignorant of these matters, having been many years at sea—and seamen, you must know, are curious in knots; I cannot endure to see anything done lubberly.