Also 6 bongler, 7 bunglar. [f. as prec. + -ER1.] One who bungles; a clumsy unskilful worker.
1533. More, Answ. Poyson. Bk., Wks. (1557), 1089/1. He is euen but a very bungler.
1642. Milton, Apol. Smect., Wks. 1738, I. 127. If any Carpenter, Smith, or Weaver, were such a bungler in his Trade.
1820. W. Irving, Sketch Bk., II. 326. A bungler at all sports that required patience or adroitness.
1858. Hawthorne, Fr. & It. Jrnls., I. 292. The greatest bungler that ever botched a block of marble.
Hence Bungler-like a. and adv.
1603. Florio, Montaigne (1634), 491. That Painter having bungler-like drawn some Cockes.
1611. Cotgr., Rudement ruggedly, harshly, bunglarlike.