different between fambly vs rambly

fambly

English

Etymology

From family.

Noun

fambly (plural famblies)

  1. (dialect) Family.
    • 1905, Charles Waddell Chesnutt, The Colonel's Dream
      Lawd, no, suh, de fambly did n' die out — 'deed dey did n' die out! dey ain't de kind er fambly ter die out! But it's mos' as bad, suh — dey's moved away.
    • 1915, Irvin Shrewsbury Cobb, Old Judge Priest
      But there's a right smart chance of middle-aged famblies and even a few toler'ble new famblies in this here community.

fambly From the web:

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rambly

English

Etymology

ramble +? -y

Adjective

rambly (comparative more rambly, superlative most rambly)

  1. Tending to ramble, to wander aimlessly or to make meandering digressions.
    • 1947, Kenneth Hamlyn McConnel, Rex Hazlewood, Planning the Australian homestead (page 100)
      But the mere mention of garden design is anathema to many people; they love a "rambly" garden. Such a garden is based on rambly ideas. This shrub would "look well" here; a bed of roses would "be just the thing" there; []
    • 1988, U-M Computing News (volume 3, page 71)
      Is your writing wordy and rambly? Try these two new products and you may discover that you can be a better, faster writer than you think!

Anagrams

  • marbly

rambly From the web:

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