lumpily

English

Etymology

lumpy + -ly

Adverb

lumpily (comparative more lumpily, superlative most lumpily)

  1. In a lumpy manner, with lumps.
    • 1912, Joseph Conrad, chapter 4, in A Personal Record:
      I had no idea that anything in the shape of a horse could be so limp as that, either living or dead. His wild mane hung down lumpily, a mere mass of inanimate horsehair; his aggressive ears had collapsed, but as he went swaying slowly across the front of the bridge I noticed an astute gleam in his dreamy, half-closed eye.
    • 2011 February 1, Stephanie Nolen, “India makes a clean start with first laundromat”, in The Globe and Mail:
      An hour later, he had paid about $3.25, been talked through the workings of a small bank of stainless-steel machines, and was leaving with a bag of fluffy if lumpily folded clothes.
  2. Like a lump; awkwardly, heavily, ponderously.
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