different between ungainly vs meathead

ungainly

English

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation, General American) IPA(key): /?n??e?nli/
  • Hyphenation: un?gain?ly

Etymology 1

un- (prefix meaning ‘not’) +? gainly (graceful; becoming; proper, suitable; gracious, kindly) (from gain (dexterous; convenient, easy, handy; suitable), from Old Norse gegn (fit, serviceable; direct, straight; honest; kindly) + -ly (suffix forming adjectives from nouns)). Compare dialectal Norwegian Nynorsk ugjegnleg (stubborn; troublesome).

Adjective

ungainly (comparative ungainlier or more ungainly, superlative ungainliest or most ungainly)

  1. Clumsy; lacking grace.
    • 1962, Edward [Ronald] Weismiller, chapter XI, in The Serpent Sleeping, New York, N.Y.: Putnam, ?OCLC; republished London; Portland, Or.: Frank Cass Publishers, 1998, ?ISBN, page 169:
      His body, though thin, looked oversized and ungainly, his limbs poorly knit together; he appeared to conquer his tendency to awkwardness by making only the smallest, most deliberate of movements.
  2. Difficult to move or to manage; unwieldy.
  3. (obsolete) Unsuitable; unprofitable.
Alternative forms
  • ungainlie (obsolete)
Derived terms
  • ungainliness
Translations

Noun

ungainly (plural ungainlies)

  1. (rare) An ungainly person or thing.

Etymology 2

ungain (from un- + gain (dexterous; convenient, easy, handy; suitable)) +? -ly.

Adverb

ungainly (comparative ungainlier or more ungainly, superlative ungainliest or most ungainly)

  1. (obsolete) In an ungainly or unbecoming manner; improperly; undeservedly, unduly; unsuitably.

Anagrams

  • guanylin, unlaying

ungainly From the web:

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meathead

English

Etymology

From meat +? head.The term meathead is often said to come from the classic 1970s television situation comedy "All In The Family," wherein main character Archie Bunker (Carroll O'Connor) used the nickname to address his son-in-law, Michael Stivic (Rob Reiner), starting with the premiere episode ("Meet the Bunkers") that first aired January 12, 1971. The term is also used three times in the "Star Witness" episode of the television situation comedy "Green Acres," an episode that first aired January 26, 1971, exactly two weeks after the premiere of "All in the Family." However, the word appeared in writing as early as 1863.

Pronunciation

Noun

meathead (plural meatheads)

  1. (slang) An ungainly, dull or stupid person; someone who is lazy, disrespectful and/or whose beliefs and philosophies clash with another.
  2. (slang) A large, muscular, stupid male, especially an athlete.
    Synonyms: brute, jock
    Gary was a hulking meathead who, when he wasn't playing football, was either hunting, fishing or getting drunk and rowdy in some topless bar.
  3. (military, slang, Canada) A member of the Canadian Forces Military Police.
Translations

References

Anagrams

  • headmate

meathead From the web:

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