sparkful

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English

Etymology

From spark +‎ -ful.

Adjective

sparkful (comparative more sparkful, superlative most sparkful)

  1. (uncommon) Lively, vivacious; smart.
    • 1605, M. N. [pseudonym; William Camden], Remaines of a Greater Worke, Concerning Britaine, , London: G E for Simon Waterson, →OCLC, page 18:
      Hitherto will our sparkefull Youth laugh at their great grandfathers English, who had more care to do well, than to speake minion-like, and left more glory to vs by their exploiting of great actes, than we shall do by our sonnetting.
    • 1827 February 5, Walter Augustus Shirley, “”, in Thomas Hill, editor, Letters and Memoir of the Late Walter Augustus Shirley , published 1849, page 95:
      It described the first ceiling I mentioned as “Apollo drawn by four sparkful steeds in a shining cart, the egregious Domenichino’s work.”
    • 1929, Arthur Quiller-Couch, “Introduction”, in William Shakespeare, All’s Well That Ends Well, page xxvii:
      [] he is quite well drawn, and of a piece with more than one sparkful young ‘hero’ of Shakespeare’s invention—with Bassanio, for instance, or the earlier Romeo.
    • 1998, The American Enterprise, volume 9, page 78:
      Rachel was vivacious and sparkful. As her type is wont to do, she married a painfully jealous man, one Lewis Robards.

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