[ adj ] primly out of date <adj.all> nothing so frumpish as last year's gambling game
In general, she considers private-label goods to be "the kind of frumpy stuff you'd expect to see on the first floor of a department store."
He was frumpy, rumpled, a lot like Lt.
She had decided to pass on long skirts and the soft, slender outline of 1993, the look which demands clumpy shoes and looks frumpy with spike-heeled court shoes.
Juliet Booth's painfully frumpy Helena, John Graham-Hall's impossibly gangling Lysander, and Peter Rose's irrepressible Bottom must be mentioned, together with Emil Wolk's virtuoso, menacing Puck.
Philip Morris even kept the frumpy East German packaging.
Moreover, the frumpy Fuji must compete with an increasingly dolledup Delicious.