cornersome

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English

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Etymology

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From corner +‎ -some.

Adjective

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cornersome (comparative more cornersome, superlative most cornersome)

  1. (dated) Characterised or marked by (having) corners
    • 1902, Car: A Journal of Travel by Land, Sea and Air, volume 2, page 120:
      The road is cornersome, but much easier to find than one would imagine from the map.
    • 1903, Ellen Burns Sherman, Why Love Grows Cold, page 120:
      For one man's virtues may be in such a crude and cornersome stage of development that they will offend more than the refined faults of another man.
    • 1904, John Walter Edward Douglas-Scott-Montagu Montagu (2nd Baron), The Best Ways Out of London:
      It is cornersome, but goodly; intricate, but interesting, and worth the learning.
    • 1911, Motorcycle Illustrated, volume 6, page 46:
      Between them and home lay the 10 miles of road over Snaefell summit, 6 miles of steep up-grade with two wicked hairpin bends, and 4 miles of very fast descent, also somewhat cornersome.