cradlesome

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From cradle +‎ -some.

Adjective[edit]

cradlesome (comparative more cradlesome, superlative most cradlesome)

  1. Characterised or marked by cradling
    • 1947, Crow Field, (Please provide the book title or journal name):
      But I had been pushed across the boundary by I didn't know what hands, whether streaked or cradlesome or hooflike, and I could not turn around.
    • 1956, The Marble Orchard:
      No one, of course, has seen her, and Ned and Beetie are about to experience the hammocking, cradlesome shock that is the beginning of despair.
    • 1975, North Carolina Quarterly - Volumes 27-28:
      And Geneva-Honey Crowningburg — she of the cradlesome escutcheon, the electric wool — she looms in a paper-shaded brokeneye and waves "bye- bye" (which is dumb since her man is plainly coming home, not going away).