ungrandmotherly

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From un- +‎ grandmotherly.

Adjective[edit]

ungrandmotherly (comparative more ungrandmotherly, superlative most ungrandmotherly)

  1. Not grandmotherly.
    • 1870 June 14, “W. Gilmore Simms”, in The Galveston Daily News, number 238, Galveston, Tex., page [2], column 2:
      Left without a mother in his infancy—perhaps that was what prevented him from achieving the highest fame as an author—his father placed him with a grandmother, who, in a singularly ungrandmotherly way, cheated him out of the appropriations for his education.
    • 1870 November 5, “Mrs Wimbush’s Revenge”, in William Chambers, Robert Chambers, editors, Chambers’s Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, fourth series, volume VII, number 358, chapter II, page 709, column 2:
      Here, therefore, we have Mrs Wimbush, a comely widow, with a daughter somewhat prematurely developed, on the one hand, and with a mother persistently juvenile and evergreen, on the other: Mrs Wimbush and her daughter Carry living together in Whittington Lodge, Highgate; Mrs Marrables, the youthful and the ungrandmotherly, dwelling by herself at Taunton, and devoting her time to collecting subscriptions for different charitable objects, not forgetting her own rents.
    • 2007, Linda Lael Miller, The McKettrick Way, Silhouette Books, →ISBN, page 241:
      She stood with her back to the fireplace, looking very ungrandmotherly in her tailored slacks and silk sweater.
    • 2017, E[mily] K[ate] Johnston, That Inevitable Victorian Thing, Dutton Books, →ISBN, page 35:
      She had never known her grandmother, on either side, and when she was little she was a bit resentful that Theresa was such a drastically ungrandmotherly type.