Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- adjective Boisterous; rowdy.
- adjective Appropriate for rough wear or use.
- noun A small sloop with a mainsail, jib, and keel but no bowsprit.
from The Century Dictionary.
- Noting something which knocks (other things) about; rough; buffeting; boisterous: as, a knockabout game of foot-ball.
- Accustomed to knock about or to be knocked about: as, a knockabout globe-trotter; suitable to be knocked about in: as, a knockabout coat.
- Noisy; full of horse-play: as, a knockabout entertainment; knockabout business.
- In Australia, applied to a jack of all trades on a station.
- noun A traveler; one who has knocked about.
- noun A performer in a knockabout playorsketch;the sketch itself.
- noun In Australia, a hand on a station who does a little of everything.
- noun A small sailing-yacht of light construction and simple sail rig, the latter consisting of a mainsail and a jib bent on a stay that is set up on the stem of the boat. These boats, as a rule, are flat-bottomed, with a fin-keel, and can be handled very quickly, going from one tack to another without apparently losing speed. Some knockabouts are provided with a center-board instead of a fin, for use in shallow waters.
- noun A small launch.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- noun (Naut.) A small yacht, generally from fifteen to twenty-five feet in length, having a mainsail and a jib; a sloop with a simplified rig and no bowsprit. All knockabouts have ballast and either a keel or centerboard. The original type was twenty-one feet in length. The next larger type is called a
raceabout . - noun Theat. Slang A knockabout performer or performance.
- noun Colloq., Australia A man hired on a sheep station to do odd jobs.
- adjective Marked by knocking about or roughness.
- adjective Theat. Slang Of noisy and violent character; marked by farce, pratfalls, and horseplay.
- adjective Characterized by, or suitable for, knocking about, or traveling or wandering hither and thither; suitable for use in rough activity; suited for everyday use; -- used especially of clothing.
- adjective Collog., Australia That does odd jobs; -- said of a class of hands or laborers on a sheep station.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- adjective
Boisterous - adjective Suitable for rough use.
- noun sailing A small
sailboat lacking abowsprit , of a type found primarily in theMassachusetts area - noun entertainment A
slapstick comedy or comedian. - noun A
tumbler . - noun Clothing suitable for rough use.
- noun Workers habitually engaged in casual employment.
- noun People living in rough, violent conditions.
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- adjective full of rough and exuberant animal spirits
- noun a sloop with a simplified rig and no bowsprit
- adjective suitable for rough use
- verb be around; be alive or active
- verb strike against forcefully
Etymologies
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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Sir Alex Ferguson's side a real end of term knockabout feel and even less incentive for the neutral to tune in tonight.
Telegraph.co.uk: news, business, sport, the Daily Telegraph newspaper, Sunday Telegraph 2009
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The vaudeville act of "The Fighting Keatons" concentrated almost completely on the category known as knockabout farce.
Instant Education 2007
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There was another called a knockabout - (I am not very good on these things but apparently a knockabout knows every machine in the shop) and they tell me they were coming back to start training women in Canada with the same high hopes, and I am sure those hopes will be carried out, and the women of Canada will be as good as the women of England.
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For those of us brought up on the "he'll be disappointed with that" school of punditry beloved of former footballers, this kind of knockabout stuff is almost worth getting up – or staying up – for.
The ravelled mystery of David Lloyd's eyebrows Martin Kelner 2010
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But, largely as a result of some ill-considered comments by Rhodri Morgan about climate change the day before, the debate degenerated into 'knockabout'.
Archive 2007-02-01 Glyn Davies 2007
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But, largely as a result of some ill-considered comments by Rhodri Morgan about climate change the day before, the debate degenerated into 'knockabout'.
Carwyn Blowing with the Wind. Glyn Davies 2007
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Guido is a very different show, he's "knockabout".
A Big Stick and a Small Carrot Garry 2006
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Here he secured the "knockabout" horse, always kept saddled and bridled about the station for generally-useful work, and set off at a swinging canter up the paddock after his own steed.
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Don’t believe you’d care for the kind of knockabout jobs I’ll have to get.”
Our Mr. Wrenn 2004
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Don't believe you'd care for the kind of knockabout jobs I'll have to get. "
Our Mr. Wrenn, the Romantic Adventures of a Gentle Man Sinclair Lewis 1918
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