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landlubber
[ land-luhb-er ]
noun
- an unseasoned sailor or someone unfamiliar with the sea.
landlubber
/ ˈlændˌlʌbə /
noun
- nautical any person having no experience at sea
Other Words From
- landlubber·ish adjective
- landlubber·ly landlubbing adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of landlubber1
Word History and Origins
Origin of landlubber1
Example Sentences
But even if most mammals are landlubbers, the ability to glide or fly has evolved again and again during mammalian evolution, in species ranging from bats to flying squirrels.
Shifa, for all her cleverness, was very much a landlubber and not much use at sea.
Unlike the prestigious Ivy League squads, the Huskies were mostly middle and working class landlubbers who’d only taken up oars to pay for school.
And a great many of us landlubbers are cheering them on — quite the swing in sentiment since “Jaws” made us all rethink our relationship with the ocean’s murk.
For millions of years, early landlubbers likely wriggled back to the ocean to swallow prey snagged on land.
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