CRIPPLE


Meaning of CRIPPLE in English

I. ˈkripəl noun

( -s )

Etymology: Middle English cripel, from Old English crypel; akin to Middle Low German kropel, krepel, cripple, Old Norse kryppill, Old English cryppan to bend, crēopan to creep — more at creep

1.

a. : one that has lost or never has had the use of a limb or limbs or has lost a greater part of such use : a lame person or animal : one that creeps, halts, or limps

b. : a person disabled, deficient, or ineffective in a specified manner or fashion

a heart cripple

social and mental cripples

c. : a game bird or mammal injured but not recovered by the hunter

2. : support ; especially : a temporary staging used in washing or painting windows

3.

a. : something flawed or imperfect (as a badly done job, a damaged railway car, or a cake marred in the baking)

b. dialect : swampy or low wet ground usually covered with brush or thickets

4. : a baseball pitch delivered without much stuff on it especially when the count favors the batter (as at three balls and no strikes)

hit the cripple for a double

5. : a unit in a building frame that is shorter than is usual for such a unit (as a stud reaching only from a window opening to a ceiling beam)

II. adjective

Etymology: Middle English cripel, from cripel, n.

: being a cripple : lame ; also : worn out : inferior

III. verb

( crippled ; crippled ; crippling -p(ə)liŋ ; cripples )

Etymology: Middle English criplen, from cripel, n.

transitive verb

: to make a cripple of: as

a. : to deprive of the use of a limb (as a leg or foot)

those sorry thousands crippled by arthritis

b. : to deprive of strength, efficiency, wholeness, or capability for service

strikes are crippling our basic industries

such a sea would cripple any boat

intransitive verb

: to be, become, or act like a cripple:

a. : to walk lamely : hobble , halt

b. : to become disabled, incapacitated, or weakened

Synonyms: see maim , weaken

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.