barksome

English

Etymology

From bark + -some.

Adjective

barksome (comparative more barksome, superlative most barksome)

  1. Characterised or marked by barking
    • 2001, Rick Bass, Colter:
      I stepped over to the corner and lifted the sheets of paper, and there she was, tinier than I had remembered, and no longer fierce or barksome, and no longer any super dog, capable of great and daring leaps of escape, but instead a quivering, terrified little pup.
    • 2008, Marvin Kaye, The Ghost Quartet:
      Yet Hamlet thought he heard someone speaking, and not inside the stables, where grooms would be caring for the horses, and not in the kennels, either, where the barksome dogs were being fed and petted.
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