Wiktionary
n. One who gibbers (talks rapidly and incoherently).
Usage examples of "gibberer".
The Vorquelf knelt beside a gibberer body and tugged down its lower lip.
Then the gibberers howled and I saw they were the thr I went for them.
Her minions, the vylaens and gibberers and frostclaws, they were real enough, but rare — so rare that they seemed things lost from an ancient time when we found them roaming our lands.
As a gibberer drew a longknife back before a thrust, red power would gather in the muscles needed to make the attack.
That gibberer had a two-handed grip on its longknife, looking to use it like an ax.
Whatever magick had caused it had flown through the window and smashed the gibberer square in the back, lifting the creature from the floor.
The gibberer spun in the air, then its chest exploded, filling the air with a vapor of viscera, blood, and bone.
What little wall there had been a dozen feet away had vanished, carrying away the stairs, the landing, and splashing the wounded gibberer into a red stain over the debris.
Then Ryswin reached it and beheaded it with a short stroke of a gibberer longknife.
She took the homeland, now she uses it to breed a population of warmages to lead her gibberers against us.
I’ve fought bandits in Yslin and gibberers in the woodlands of the Black Marches.
While gibberers, frost-claws, and vylaens might not have been the most mentally flexible of troops, they did come in large groups, were used to the cold, and had a casual disregard for their own lives.
On a snowy hill a gibberer spun and fell with two shafts crossed in his chest.
Another gibberer who stood and hooted defiantly as two arrows fell short of his position had his head snapped back by a shaft that pierced his right eye and burst through the back of his skull.
While very effective on the gibberers, they did not do as much damage to the hoargoun as they could have.