• Nettlesome

    Origin

    nettle + -some

    Full definition of nettlesome

    Adjective

    nettlesome

    1. (of a person, thing, situation, etc.) Causing irritation, annoyance, or discomfort; bothersome, irksome.My poison ivy rash is very nettlesome.
    2. (of a task, problem, etc.) Thorny; difficult to deal with, especially due to being complex or tricky.The task of proving Fermat’s “last” theorem remains nettlesome.Be careful what you say to him; he's a nettlesome fellow.
      • 1832, Mary Russell Mitford (editor), Lights and Shadows of American Life, vol. 2, p. 241:All the strange oaths and imprecations found in a seaman's vocabulary were called into service by our nettlesome captain and his crew, and hurled without mercy on the winds and weather.
      • 1904, Winston Churchill (novelist), The Crossing (2003 Kessinger reprint), ISBN 9780766169982, p. 61:It so chanced that on the second day after my arrival a pack-train came along, guided by a nettlesome old man and a strong, black-haired lass of sixteen or thereabouts. The old man . . . had no sooner slipped the packs from the horses than he began to rail at Hans, who stood looking on. "You damned Dutchmen all be Tories, and worse," he cried.
      • 1950 Oct. 9, "The Press: John Smith, Negro," Time:Almost daily, U.S. newspapers are confronted by a nettlesome problem for which they have found no final answer. The problem: Should Negroes be identified as such in news stories?
      • 1989 Dec. 29, Kenneth B. Noble, "Nigeria Enlists the Nettlesome Man in Short Pants," New York Times (retrieved 20 Jan 2011)For nearly 40 years, Mr. Solarin, an unpretentious and intensely pugnacious man, has been an intellectual guru for Nigeria's disenchanted and disfranchised.
      • 1995, Eugenia Price, Beauty from Ashes, ISBN 9780385423144, p. 146:No one could act naturally with her. . . . She was sure she had never lived through days in which she, Anne Couper Fraser, forced those nearby to tiptoe around her nettlesome personality.
      • 2000 Jan. 6, Jeremy Quittner, "The Lemonade Stand Circa 2000: A Boy, a Site, a $10 Million Lawsuit ," BusinessWeek (retrieved 20 Jan 2011)He's also delving into one of the most nettlesome legal issues on the Net — whether one party can turn another's trademark into a URL.
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