Asprawl in the chair, his long legs stretched before him
asprawl in American English
(əˈsprɔl)
adverb or adjective
being in a sprawling state or posture
The body lay asprawl among the wreckage
Word origin
[1875–80; a-1 + sprawl]This word is first recorded in the period 1875–80. Other words that entered Englishat around the same time include: graph, massage, musical chairs, neoclassic, pressure pointa- is a reduced form of the Old English preposition on, meaning “on,” “in,” “into,” “to,” “toward,” preserved before a noun in a prepositionalphrase, forming a predicate adjective or an adverbial element (afoot; abed; ashore; aside; away), or before an adjective (afar; aloud; alow), as a moribund prefix with a verb (acknowledge), and in archaic and dialectal use before a present participle in -ing (set the bells aringing); and added to a verb stem with the force of a present participle (ablaze; agape; aglow; astride; and originally, awry)