Awkward

ahd-5
  • adjective. Not graceful; ungainly.
  • adjective. undefined
  • adjective. Not dexterous; clumsy.
  • adjective. Clumsily or unskillfully performed.
  • adjective. undefined
  • adjective. Difficult to handle or manage.
  • adjective. Difficult to effect; uncomfortable.
  • adjective. undefined
  • adjective. Marked by or causing embarrassment or discomfort.
  • adjective. Requiring great tact, ingenuity, skill, and discretion.
  • The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia
  • In the wrong direction; in the wrong way; backward.
  • Asquint.
  • Awkwardly; clumsily.
  • Turned the wrong way; backhanded.
  • Perverted; perverse.
  • Untoward; adverse.
  • Ill adapted for use or handling; unhandy in operation; clumsy: as, awkward instruments or contrivances.
  • Wanting dexterity or skill in action or movement; clumsy in doing anything, as in using tools or implements; bungling.
  • Ungraceful in action or person; ungainly; uncouth: as, awkward gestures; the awkward gambols of the elephant.
  • Embarrassed; not at ease: used in relation to persons: as, an awkward feeling.
  • Not easily dealt with; troublesome; vexatious; requiring caution: as, an awkward predicament.
  • Unlucky.
  • Synonyms and Awkward, Clumsy, Ungainly, Uncouth, Bungling, unhandy, inexpert, unskilful, inapt, lubberly; uncourtly, inelegant, constrained, clownish. Awkward is generally applied to want of ease and grace or skill in bodily movement, especially of the arms or legs: as, an awkward gait; awkward in the use of a tool. Clumsy starts from the notion of heaviness, and consequent unwieldiness or awkwardness in use; it is applicable to the whole body or to any part of it, even when still: as, a clumsy figure; clumsy hands. This difference is also found in the figurative use of the words: a clumsy excuse is one that is put together badly; an awkward excuse is one that may be good, but is not gracefully presented. Ungainly, literally unhandsome, not pleasing to the eye, is applied generally to awkwardness of appearance. Uncouth, literally unknown, uncommon, and so, by a bit of human conceit, uninstructed, untrained, unrefined, sometimes even rude, barbarous: as, uncouth phrases, manners. Bungling, awkward in doing, handling awkwardly, spoiling by awkwardness, in either literal or figurative use: as, he made bungling work of it.
  • the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English
  • adjective. Wanting dexterity in the use of the hands, or of instruments; not dexterous; without skill; clumsy; wanting ease, grace, or effectiveness in movement; ungraceful
  • adjective. Not easily managed or effected; embarrassing.
  • adjective. Perverse; adverse; untoward.
  • Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
  • adverb. In a backwards direction.
  • adjective. Lacking dexterity in the use of the hands, or of instruments
  • adjective. Not easily managed or effected; embarrassing
  • adjective. Lacking social skills, or uncomfortable with social interaction
  • adjective. Perverse; adverse; difficult to handle
  • WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
  • adjective. lacking grace or skill in manner or movement or performance
  • adjective. socially uncomfortable; unsure and constrained in manner
  • adjective. difficult to handle or manage especially because of shape
  • adjective. not elegant or graceful in expression
  • adjective. hard to deal with; especially causing pain or embarrassment
  • adjective. causing inconvenience
  • Word Usage
    "MISCELLANEOUS WORDS. adobe _ado'ba_ algebra not _bra_ alien _alyen_, not _alien_ ameliorate _amelyorate_ antarctic _antarktik_ anti not _anti_ archangel _arkangel_ archbishop _arch_, not _ark_ arch fiend _arch_, not _ark_ architect _arkitect_ awkward _awkward_, not _ard_"
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