addled

verb
/ˈæ.dəld/

Etymology

From Middle English addled, adyld, equivalent to addle (“urine, liquid filth”) + -ed. Addle derives from Old English adel, adela (“mud, mire, liquid manure”), cognate with Old Swedish adel (“urine”), Middle Low German adel, Dutch aal (“manure”). Used in noun phrase addle egg (mid-13c.) “egg that does not hatch, rotten egg”, lit. “urine egg”, a calque of Latin ovum urinum, which is itself an erroneous calque of Ancient Greek οὔριον ᾠόν (oúrion ōión, “putrid egg”, literally “wind egg”), from οὔριος (oúrios, “of the wind”), from οὖρος (oûros, “fair wind”) (confused by Roman writers with οὔριος (oúrios, “of urine”), from οὖρον (oûron, “urine”)). Because of this usage, the noun in English was taken as an adjective from c. 1600, meaning “putrid”.

  1. calqued from ovum urinum
  2. derived from adel
  3. inherited from addled

Definitions

  1. simple past and past participle of addle

  2. Bad, rotten

    Bad, rotten; inviable, containing a dead embryo.

    • He was touched in the cavity where his heart should have been—in that nest of addled eggs, where the birds of heaven would have lived if they had not been whistled away—by the fervour of this reproach.
    • I haven’t a bit o’ patience with you—sitting on an addled egg for ever, as if there was never a fresh un in the world.
    • We have learned to whittle the Eden Tree to the shape of a surplice-peg, / We have learned to bottle our parents twain in the yelk of an addled egg,
  3. Confused

    Confused; mixed up.

    • coke-addled
    • crack-addled
    • But she counted and counted till she got that addled she’d start to count in the basket for a spoon sometimes; […].
  4. + 1 more definition
    1. Morbid, corrupt, putrid, or barren.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for addled. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA