port ‧ ly /ˈpɔːtli $ ˈpɔːr-/ BrE AmE adjective written
[ Date: 1400-1500 ; Origin: port 'behavior, deportment' (14-19 centuries) , from French , from porter ; ⇨ ↑ portage ]
someone who is portly, especially an old man, is fat and round:
a portly old gentleman
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THESAURUS
▪ fat having too much flesh on your body. It is rude to tell someone that they are fat. It is also better not to use any of these words when talking directly to someone about their body:
She thinks she’s fat.
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He looks the same, just a little fatter.
▪ overweight weighing more than you should:
Many medical conditions are caused by being overweight.
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She was several kilos overweight.
▪ big/large used when saying that someone has a big body. Large is more common than big in written English:
My father was a big man.
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two large ladies
▪ obese extremely fat in a way that is dangerous to your health:
He went to a summer camp for obese teenagers.
▪ chubby slightly fat in a nice-looking way – used especially about babies and children:
A chubby little baby was playing on the rug.
▪ plump a woman or child who is plump is slightly fat, especially in a pleasant way:
Her mother was a plump cheerful woman.
▪ flabby having soft loose skin that looks unattractive:
a flabby stomach
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Her body was getting old and flabby.
▪ portly literary fat and round – used especially about fairly old men:
The bishop was a portly middle-aged gentleman.