Word of the day: BEDRAGGLED
Pronunciation: 
be·drag·gled   UK/bɪˈdræɡ.əld/ and US/bɪˈdræɡ.əld/

Meaning
'Bedraggled' means 'wet, limp, and dirty, usually because of rain or rough weather. Messy, untidy, or exhausted in appearance.

Origin and history:

'Bedraggled' originates from the early 18th-century English verb bedraggle (first recorded around 1727), which means "to soil or wet by dragging in dirt or mud". It is formed by combining the prefix be- (thoroughly/completely) with draggle, a frequentative form of "drag"

Cultural significance and modern usage:

The word is frequently used to describe a person’s appearance, such as "bedraggled hair" or a "bedraggled figure" stumbling from a storm. It is used to convey a sense of being tired, worn-out, or in a "deplorable condition".
The term is often used to evoke sympathy or to emphasize a person's low status or extreme fatigue, such as a "beggar's bedraggled clothes".

Beyond literary use, it is used to describe relatable scenarios: travelers after long flights, parents with crying babies, or students during intense periods.

Figurative Meaning: The term can be used figuratively to describe a tarnished reputation or a failing institution, meaning it is in a "broken-down" or "dilapidated

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Interesting facts:

  • Unlike many emotional adjectives, bedraggled was born from physical conditions—rain, mud, puddles, and unpaved roads of old England.
  • Birds after rain are frequently described as bedraggled in nature writing.
  • Writers of the Victorian era loved this'Bedraggled' because it instantly painted a picture of urban hardship and damp city life—especially in works by Charles Dickens.
  • A bedraggled character often appears after facing adversity, making the word popular in stories of resilience and courage

Examples from literature:

  • Wind raged, the bean leaves were covered with dust; they looked bedraggled, unhealthy, dying.- The Milagro Beanfield War by John Nichols
  • We passed through the outskirts of Norfolk, and the people of that town surveyed our bedraggled carnage with a gray, defeated mien.- The Astonishing Life of Octavian Nothing, Traitor to the Nation, Volume II: The Kingdom on the Waves by M.T. Anderson
  • She crouched down next to Laney, who gazed rapturously at the bedraggled tree.- The Vanderbeekers of 141st Street by Karina Yan Glaser

Synonyms:

  • Disheveled
  • Soaked
  • Rumpled
  • Shabby
  • Tattered
  • Mussed

Antonyms:

  • Dry
  • Arid
  • Unwatered
  • Waterless
  • Bone-dry

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