English edit

Etymology edit

From brood +‎ -some.

Adjective edit

broodsome (comparative more broodsome, superlative most broodsome)

  1. Characterised or marked by brooding
    • 1903, Ernest A. Treeton, The Instigator:
      The forest highway was as empty, broodsome, and silent as any spirit grove in a fanciful Deadman's Land; [...]
    • 1908, Gerda Dalliba, An Earth Poem, and Other Poems:
      I con the energy of each and all, I am myself a broodsome cognisance, Watching how this and that by bulb and stem then Leans forth, [...]
    • 2010, Elizabeth Bunce, Elizabeth C. Bunce, A Curse Dark As Gold:
      Impatient, perhaps, for the child to be born, over the next weeks I was more “broodsome” than ever, as Randall put it — some word he'd picked up in the village.