English edit

Etymology edit

From squabble +‎ -y.

Pronunciation edit

Adjective edit

squabbly (comparative more squabbly, superlative most squabbly)

  1. Having the tendency to squabble, argumentative
    • 2000, Staughton Lynd, Alice Lynd, The New Rank and File, page 125:
      We came to have paid staff, and had to go by rules and regulations and contracts, and things started to get squabbly
    • 1983, Frederick Vanderbilt Field, From Right to Left: An Autobiography, page 37:
      Perhaps the two girls were closer to each other, but Osgood and I were a squabbly pair of youngsters.