Users' questions

What is the origin of discombobulated?

What is the origin of discombobulated?

Discombobulate, meaning “to confuse, frustrate,” sounds like something straight out of a cartoon. It was first recorded in the form discomboberate in the early 1800s, and apparently originated as a humorous imitation of hifalutin-sounding Latin words.

What does feeling discombobulated mean?

informal. : characterized by confusion or disorder He was discombobulated, utterly confused as to what had happened.—

How do you use discombobulated?

Discombobulated in a Sentence 🔉

  1. I felt discombobulated after working twelve hours a day for seven straight days.
  2. When the student looked at the difficult test, she felt discombobulated.
  3. The cat was discombobulated until it learned its way around the new house.

Where does the word ” discombobulate ” come from?

Where does discombobulate come from? Discombobulate, meaning “to confuse, frustrate,” sounds like something straight out of a cartoon. It was first recorded in the form discomboberate in the early 1800s, and apparently originated as a humorous imitation of hifalutin -sounding Latin words.

Is it possible to be ” combobulated ” if you can be discombobulated?

If you can be “discombobulated”, is it possible to be “combobulated”? I’ve often heard the word “discombobulated” used. But I’ve never heard of something being “combobulated”, and it’s not in any dictionary I’ve looked at. If “combobulated” is not word, where did “discombobulated” come from?

Is the plot in the book discombobulate mesmeric?

The writing is mesmeric, and while the plot is discombobulating at times, it’s also arresting and enigmatic (however frustrating and infuriating Saul can be). He turned back the clock with great hand speed and footwork bamboozling and discombobulating Thurman from all angles.

When did the word combobulate become a word?

This doesn’t help to explain why “combobulate” never became an actual word, but it gives a time frame for when “discombobulate” came into use. According to etymonline: 1834, Amer.Eng., fanciful coinage of a type popular then (originally discombobricate). Related: discombobulating; discombobulation. – RGW1976 Aug 20 ’11 at 23:15