English edit

Etymology edit

From gibber +‎ -some.

Adjective edit

gibbersome (comparative more gibbersome, superlative most gibbersome)

  1. Characterised or marked by gibber or gibberish.
    • 1991, Roger Matuz, Contemporary Literary Criticism, volume 62, page 44:
      Just so does Berryman (“Noises from underground made gibbersome,/others collected & dug Henry up”) confront God himself with human miseries: []
    • 2022, Jake Burt, The Ghoul of Windydown Vale:
      That's why it's so gibbersome—you can hear it all 'glargle graggle blaggle' when it's about to eat you.