handlesome
English
Etymology
Adjective
handlesome (comparative more handlesome, superlative most handlesome)
- (rare) Typified by, or requiring handling; (by extension) difficult to manage
- 1908, Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic News, volume 68, pages 106-107:
- River navigation is a different thing to steering a motor-car on solid dry land. But a thirty horse-power launch, doing thirteen miles an hour, is a handlesome craft, and we soon left behind us.
- 1937, Patrick Reginald Chalmers, The horn: a lay of the Grassington fox-hounds, page 50:
- " […] Tom, you had better hunt the bitch pack,
Dog hounds is none so handlesome […]
- 1948, Robert Faucett Gibbons, The Patchwork Time, page 20:
- She said: "So I sure got my hands full." Handful. To mean: handlesome. Fit to be handed from hand to hand. Hand me down my walkincane.