[f. LIMP a. + -ISH.] Somewhat limp (in quot. 1883 fig.: cf. LIMP a. 2).

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1842.  Morn. Chron., 4 April, 6/4. The body was rather limpish, but the blood was congealed on the throat, and she must have been dead some time.

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1883.  Rose Hawthorne Lathrop, in Harper’s Mag., Sept., 509/1. He was trying to cut a limpish figure.

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