awkwardnessful
English
Etymology
From awkwardness + -ful, possibly coined as an example of a word that is self-descriptive.
Adjective
awkwardnessful (comparative more awkwardnessful, superlative most awkwardnessful)
- (rare, nonstandard) Full of awkwardness.
- [1979, Douglas R. Hofstadter, Gödel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid, Vintage Books, published 1980, →ISBN, pages 20–21:
- Divide the adjectives in English into two categories: those which are self-descriptive, such as “pentasyllabic”, “awkwardnessful”, and “recherché”, and those which are not, such as “edible”, “incomplete”, and “bisyllabic”.]
- 1992 November 7, “The Democrats and Me”, in bit.listserv.words-l (Usenet):
- Please have some consideration for non-natives' awkwardnessful sentences.
- 2001 February 2, “CHAT: Restructuring vs. Restructuralization”, in Czechlist (Usenet):
- I think it's very awkwardnessful.
- 2001 May 15, “Arrays and databases”, in comp.lang.tcl (Usenet):
- Right now we have an awkward situation, because the [array startsearch/anymore/nextelement/donesearch] commands are not only awkwardnessful, but also SLOW -- until [foreach x [array names y] {...}] starts thrashing.
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