rankle

verb
/ˈɹæŋ.kəl/

Etymology

From Middle English ranklen, ranclen, from Old French rancler, räoncler, draoncler (“to ulcerate, to form a boil”), from Old French draoncle (“a boil”), from Latin dracunculus (“little serpent”), diminutive of Latin dracō (“serpent, dragon”).

  1. derived from dracō — “serpent, dragon
  2. derived from dracunculus — “little serpent
  3. derived from draoncle — “a boil
  4. derived from rancler
  5. inherited from ranklen

Definitions

  1. To cause irritation, bitterness or acrimony.

    • My colleague's gratuitous criticism still rankles with me.
    • […] and the alliance which was dictated by sound policy, by family ties, and by just fear of England's sea power, was further assured to France by recent and still existing injuries that must continue to rankle with Spain. […]
  2. To fester.

    • a splinter rankles in the flesh
    • But yet the cause and root of all his ill, Inward corruption and infected sin, Not purg'd nor heald, behind remained still, And festring sore did rankle yet within […]
    • a malady that burns and rankles inward
  3. A festering, embittering object or condition, either mental, or a physical sore or ulcer.

    • To this the Prince appeared to acquiesce; but I saw it did not please, and left a rankle in his mind.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for rankle. 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