different between shamble vs shambly
shamble
English
Etymology
From Middle English schambyll, shamyll, schamel, from Old English s?eamol, scamol (“bench, stool”), from Proto-Germanic *skamulaz, *skamilaz, from Latin scamellum, a variant of scabellum (“footstool”). Cognate with Dutch schemel (“footstool, bench”), German Schemel (“stool”), Danish skammel (“stool”). Icelandic skemill (“footstool”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /??æmbl?/
Verb
shamble (third-person singular simple present shambles, present participle shambling, simple past and past participle shambled)
- To walk while shuffling or dragging the feet.
- I wasn't too impressed with the fellow, when he shambled in unenthusiastically and an hour late.
Synonyms
- shuffle
Translations
Noun
shamble (plural shambles)
- (mining) One of a succession of niches or platforms, one above another, to hold ore which is thrown successively from platform to platform, and thus raised to a higher level.
See also
- shambles
Anagrams
- hambles
shamble From the web:
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shambly
English
Etymology
shamble +? -y
Adjective
shambly (comparative more shambly, superlative most shambly)
- Shambling; not coordinated or graceful; clumsy.
Anagrams
- Hamblys
shambly From the web:
- what does shambles mean
- what is the meaning of shambles
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