umbrageous

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English

Etymology

From (deprecated template usage) [etyl] Middle French ombrageux, or from umbrage +‎ -ous.

Pronunciation

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Adjective

umbrageous (comparative more umbrageous, superlative most umbrageous)

  1. Having shade; shady; having shade provided by thick foliage.
    • 1766 June 5, “An Exercise, containing a Dialogue, and two Odes, performed at the public Commencement in the College of Philadelphia, May 20, 1766”, in The Pennsylvania Gazette[1], page 2:
      [] What tho' his Forests wave / Umbrageous to the Gale, and Nature walks / In loose Luxuriance o'er his native Plains; / Those Forests wave, those Plains delight no more; / []
    • 1838 June 9, “The City Improvement Candidate”, in The Daily Pittsburgh Gazette[2], page 2:
      Not a single one of those "umbrageous trees," of which our Mayor declaimed so feelingly, has yet been planted; [] They should protest against his withdrawal from that station, until the banks of the Monongahela and Duquesne Way are once more covered with "umbrageous trees," []
    • 1858, R M Ballantyne, The Coral Island:
      ... without which the stem could not have supported its heavy and umbrageous top.
    • 1891, Mary Noailles Murfree, In the "Stranger People's" Country, Nebraska 2005, p. 130:
      Rhodes gazed wistfully into the dense umbrageous tangle whence his host had disappeared.
  2. (figuratively) Irritable, easily upset.

Derived terms