English edit

Etymology edit

From Scrabble +‎ -ist.

Noun edit

Scrabblist (plural Scrabblists)

  1. (rare) A player of the word game Scrabble.
    Synonym: Scrabbler
    • 1974, Douglas Fowler, Reading Nabokov::
      These [wordplay] curiosities are not in themselves difficult to construct, nor does their solution provide anything much deeper than the solver's thrill, that quite minor delight that the crossword-puzzler or Scrabblist derives from his addiction.
    • 2016, Ann Patty, Living with a Dead Language: My Romance with Latin, New York, NY: Penguin Books, published 2017, →ISBN, page 99:
      I didn't even have to leave my desk to indulge in my new addiction: online Scrabble. [] I'd begun playing with accomplished Scrabblists, and soon I was ranked thirty-second among my Facebook “friends”—twenty notches lower than those who had never even played.
    • 2017, Mark Seindenberg, Language at the Speed of Sight:
      Unlike Scrabblists, spelling champions [] know the meanings of many of the words and have studied etymology and [] morphology. They read dictionaries, not lists of six-letter words containing j, k, or q, suggesting the knowledge they acquire has greater utility.