English edit

Etymology edit

From twitter +‎ -some.

Adjective edit

twittersome (comparative more twittersome, superlative most twittersome)

  1. Characterised or marked by twittering
    • 1917, The Unitarian Register - Volume 96:
      These fancies, however, had time to perch but not to nest on mental boughs, when they were flittered away by a trig little old lady who gave me a good-morning so twittersome and chirpy that I knew there must have been far back on her prehistoric tree some bright-eyed, brown-clad songster with debonair notes and a cozy nest in the grass.
    • 1926, James Agate, The Common Touch - Volume 1; Volumes 3-6:
      The other evening — it was two o'clock in the morning, to be exact — a sick man of my acquaintance lay in bed in what could only be described as a twittersome condition.
    • 1957, John Lehmann, Alan Ross, London Magazine - Volume 4:
      I should like to like poems by Wallace Stevens, which I find coloured notes on tissue paper; as feeble and twittersome and remote as the abstracted watercolours of John Marin; [...]
    • 1965, Michael Williams, Commonweal - Volume 81:
      And the family he exploits takes things pretty hard too, which has the verbal consequence of putting too much weight on the more twittersome lines.

Anagrams edit