cripple

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Middle English cripel, crepel, crüpel, from Old English crypel (crippled; a cripple), from Proto-Germanic *krupilaz (tending to crawl; a cripple), from Proto-Indo-European *grewb- (to bend, crouch, crawl), from Proto-Indo-European *ger- (to bend, twist), equivalent to creep + -le. Cognate with Dutch kreupel, Low German Kröpel, German Krüppel, Old Norse kryppill.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈkɹɪpl/
  • Rhymes: -ɪpəl

Adjective

cripple (not comparable)

  1. (now rare, dated) Crippled.
    • 1599William Shakespeare, Henry V, iv 1
      And chide the cripple tardy-gaited night, who, like a foul and ugly witch, doth limp so tediously away.
    • 1922, Maternity and Child Welfare - Volume 6:
      Early treatment, and treatment spread over a long period, was the on means of rendering a cripple child fit to mix with its fellows on anything like equal terms, []
    • 2006, Glenn Earle Cummings, The Touch of His Hand:
      You let sin in a church and it will cripple that church's ministry. Let sin get its ugly hands on the life of an individual and it will wreck and ruin and twist any life that it gets a hold on. Here was a cripple man who was excluded from the temple.
    • 2014, Paul M Mahlobogwane, Transcend like a Butterfly:
      Other[s] think that, certain challenges are for certain people and not for them, that the reason when some women give birth to a cripple child, or male child instead to a female child, they think God did not answer their wishes, forgetting that every child is a gift from God []
    • 2015, Brennan Morton, Dying For Strangers: Memoirs of a Special Ops Operator in Iraq:
      He held the cripple boy like a towel. The cripple boy's arms and legs dangled uselessly over his father's arm, one of each on either side, while his father balanced the diaper-clad boy on his forearm.

Translations

Noun

cripple (plural cripples)

  1. (sometimes offensive) a person who has severely impaired physical abilities because of deformation, injury, or amputation of parts of the body.
    He returned from war a cripple.
    • Dryden
      I am a cripple in my limbs; but what decays are in my mind, the reader must determine.
  2. A shortened wooden stud or brace used to construct the portion of a wall above a door or above and below a window.
  3. (dialectal, Southern US except Louisiana) scrapple.
  4. (among lumbermen) A rocky shallow in a stream.

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Verb

cripple (third-person singular simple present cripples, present participle crippling, simple past and past participle crippled)

  1. to make someone a cripple; to cause someone to become physically impaired
    The car bomb crippled five passers-by.
  2. (figuratively) to damage seriously; to destroy
    My ambitions were crippled by a lack of money.
  3. to release a product (especially a computer program) with reduced functionality, in some cases, making the item essentially worthless.
    The word processor was released in a crippled demonstration version that did not allow you to save.
  4. (informal) slang: to nerf (used in gaming) something which is overpowered .

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See also

Anagrams

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