English edit

Etymology edit

From rile +‎ -some.

Adjective edit

rilesome (comparative more rilesome, superlative most rilesome)

  1. Easily aggravated; tending to get riled up.
    • 2010, Lauren Kessler, My Teenage Werewolf:
      Away from the immediate heat of our relationship—like when she's at school—I think to myself that I might even enjoy the wild energy her rilesome nature brings to my life if it weren't so evident that so much of the time the pain she causes me is anything but inadvertent.
    • 2016, Ivan Doig, Heart Earth: A Memoir, page 86:
      Wide-grained and with hard knots of stubbornness, rilesome and quick to judge and long to hold a grudge. And in the turbulent time to come, I learned to love her for even the magnificence of her shortcomings.
  2. Tending to stir or move from a state of order; roilsome.
    • 2013, Ivan Doig, English Creek:
      I can run that remark of Alec's through my ears a dozen times now and find no particular reason for it to be rilesome.
    • 2015, Michael Kilian, Bad Girl Blues:
      Les bonnes temps, Andy. Laissez les bonnes temps rouler encore. And I sure as shit wouldn't do anything rilesome about Senator Boone and his indiscreet love life.