from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
adjective Worn-out and broken-down.
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
adjective showing the wearing effects of overwork or care or suffering
adjective used until no longer useful
Etymologies
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Examples
And not only the punters: TV's Angular Ex-England Fast Bowler Punditry Eminence could be seen holding court in raddled picnic pose, a tiny plastic Viking hat on his head.
Perhaps only Rutger Hauer could have brought the correct nuance to the role of a righteous hobo who shows up in some lawless, post-apocalyptic urban hellhole in Canada, to find the loathsome roost ruled by the sadistic Drake family – a raddled old tyrant with dyed black hair and two psycho-bully sons who dress like rejects from an 80s pop video.
And not only the punters: TV's Angular Ex-England Fast Bowler Punditry Eminence could be seen holding court in raddled picnic pose, a tiny plastic Viking hat on his head.
But it is difficult to see whether anyone still emotionally invested in Courtney Love's raddled muse will be able to take succour from them at the end of such a misfiring album.
Shaun Ryder and Mark E Smith, seemingly beneficiaries of a Make-a-Wish foundation for raddled northern indie icons, attack their roles on DARE and Glitter Freeze with wonky charisma.
The saddest thing about these adorable patterns is that they're often uncut ... because adolescent girls either want to draw as little attention to themselves as possible, or they want to dress like raddled divorceés who drink in the afternoon.
DEFINITION: In the example which follows, Vonnegut may be using this word in a dual sense:
1.In the usual sense of "raddled" --- "worn-out and broken-down" (Wiktionary); and also
2. "matted" -- "adj. forming a thick tangled mess" --- Wiktionary. See also definitions for "raddle," which describe hedges, fences, etc., woven or twisted together.
EXAMPLE:
' He pointed his wife out to me. She was a scrawny, thin-lipped woman with raddled hair and bad teeth. She was sitting in a booth with an untouched beer before her. She was obviously a lunatic herself, watching us with the harrowingcuteness of schizophrenia. '
--- 2009. KURT VONNEGUT. Look at the Birdie. (Previously unpublished short fiction, posthumously collected, with a foreword by Sidney Offit). ISBN 978-0-385-34371-8. Title story "Look at the Birdie." (Page 215).
NOTE: In the right context, cunning and "cuteness" can be synonymous. See Wiktionary.
fbharjo commented on the word raddled
highly rouged
November 30, 2011
dinkum commented on the word raddled
WORD:raddled
DEFINITION: In the example which follows, Vonnegut may be using this word in a dual sense:
1.In the usual sense of "raddled" --- "worn-out and broken-down" (Wiktionary); and also
2. "matted" -- "adj. forming a thick tangled mess" --- Wiktionary. See also definitions for "raddle," which describe hedges, fences, etc., woven or twisted together.
EXAMPLE:
' He pointed his wife out to me. She was a scrawny, thin-lipped woman with raddled hair and bad teeth. She was sitting in a booth with an untouched beer before her. She was obviously a lunatic herself, watching us with the harrowing cuteness of schizophrenia. '
--- 2009. KURT VONNEGUT. Look at the Birdie. (Previously unpublished short fiction, posthumously collected, with a foreword by Sidney Offit). ISBN 978-0-385-34371-8. Title story "Look at the Birdie." (Page 215).
NOTE: In the right context, cunning and "cuteness" can be synonymous. See Wiktionary.
May 10, 2014