Comparative form of 'baulky,' meaning more inclined to refuse, hesitate, or resist movement or action.
Comparative form of baulky (adjective derived from baulk), formed by adding -er to show greater degree. Follows standard English comparative morphology.
Comparative adjectives in English follow predictable patterns—one or two syllables get '-er' (baulkier) while longer ones get 'more'—this efficiency in language structure has remained stable for centuries.
Complete word intelligence in one call. Free tier — 50 lookups/day.