"Unwieldy" means "unwieldy"--it's not an uncommon word in modern English. It means awkward or clumsy.
I can give you several sentences.That sword is too unwieldy to use in battle.The postman handed me an unwieldy parcel.We almost dropped the unwieldy desk moving it up the stairs.
A snow shovel is very unwieldy for use in the garden.
Sometimes a sledgehammer is just too unwieldy to use indoors. The twelve-inch left-handed monkey wrench is an unwieldy but useful tool. The earliest revolvers were heavy and unwieldy weapons.
The term "unwieldy" means being difficult or impossible to use or handle. The verb to wield originally meant using a sword or other weapon. The term is more likely today to apply to a tool or application that is ill-suited to the use or job to be performed.Example : "Bill complained that the permit process was unwieldy and slow."
The radio antenna was so long it was unwieldy to transport.
Unwieldy means hard to control or move because of an object's great weight or size.
The boxes were large and unwieldy so I asked for help loading the truck.
what can you say to the objection of the SCL can be noisy and unwieldy
willed as in inheritance
The cast of Unwieldy Beast - 2012 includes: Gary Frank Skaggs as himself
They are heavy and unwieldy.