brothel

noun
/ˈbɹɔθəl/US/ˈbɹɒθəl/UK/ˈbɹɑθəl/

Etymology

From Middle English brothel, brodel, brodelle, brethel (“a wretch, a depraved man or woman”) (compare also Middle English bretheling (“a wretch”)), apparently from an unrecorded Old English *brēoþel (“degenerative, corruptive”), related to Old English ābrēoþan (“to unsettle, degrade, ruin, frustrate, degenerate, deteriorate, fall away”); Old English ābroþen (“degenerate, base, trifling”); both ultimately from Proto-Germanic *breuþaną (“to fall apart; crumble”). The expected modern English form would be *broddle (see fiddle); the failure of the change from /ðl/ to /dl/ may be because of the intervening schwa in the word's uninflected forms, influence from the verb, or most likely, a dialectal development (compare stathel besides staddle).

  1. derived from *breuþaną
  2. derived from *brēoþel
  3. inherited from brothel

Definitions

  1. A house of prostitution.

  2. A wretch

    A wretch; a depraved or lewd person.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for brothel. 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