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Synonyms

gangly

American  
[gang-glee] / ˈgæŋ gli /

adjective

ganglier, gangliest
  1. gangling.


Etymology

Origin of gangly

An Americanism dating back to 1870–75

Explanation

Someone who's tall, long-limbed, and awkward is gangly. Many teenagers go through a gangly phase before they reach their full height and weight. Gangly people are gawky and skinny, and you could also describe an adolescent colt or puppy with long, ungraceful legs as gangly. The adjective gangly is American, its invention often attributed to Mark Twain, who used it in his 1872 book Roughing It, as a variation on the British word with the same meaning, gangling.

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Vocabulary lists containing gangly

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

“We’re a gangly teenager of an industry,” Monahan said.

From The Wall Street Journal • May 10, 2026

“I want to devote my entire life to military service,” the gangly teen told The Wall Street Journal last spring as he prepared to take his oath of service at a base in east Ukraine.

From The Wall Street Journal • Jan. 30, 2026

But bassist Garry Tallent never smiled that much, and Springsteen’s onstage foil, the Big Man, Clarence Clemons, was never awkward or gangly the way he is portrayed here; the man was elegance personified.

From Salon • Oct. 28, 2025

Wiggins - a gangly north Londoner, from a broken home, brought up in poverty - made it to the very top of a sport that requires clinical preparation and a calm head under pressure.

From BBC • May 13, 2025

Celaena glanced to the right to find Pelor, the gangly young assassin, watching her.

From "Throne of Glass" by Sarah J. Maas

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