frail
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English
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]- IPA(key): /fɹeɪl/
Audio (General Australian): (file) - Rhymes: -eɪl
Etymology 1
[edit]From Middle English frele, fraill, from Old French fraile, from Latin fragilis. Cognate to fraction, fracture, and doublet of fragile.
Adjective
[edit]frail (comparative frailer, superlative frailest)
- Easily broken physically; not firm or durable; liable to fail and perish.
- c. 1587–1588, [Christopher Marlowe], Tamburlaine the Great. […] The First Part […], 2nd edition, part 1, London: […] [R. Robinson for] Richard Iones, […], published 1592, →OCLC; reprinted as Tamburlaine the Great (A Scolar Press Facsimile), Menston, Yorkshire, London: Scolar Press, 1973, →ISBN, Act I, scene i:
- Returne with ſpeed, time paſſeth ſwift away,
Our life is fraile, and we may dye to day.
- 1831, John James Audubon, Ornithological Biography: Volume 1: Blue-grey Fly-catcher:
- Its nest is composed of the frailest materials, and is light and small in proportion to the size of the bird
- Weak; infirm.
- 1993, John Banville, Ghosts:
- Frail smoke of morning in the air and a sort of muffled hum that is not sound but is not silence either.
- 1922, Isaac Rosenberg, Dawn:
- O as the soft and frail lights break upon your eyelids
- (medicine) In an infirm state leading one to be easily subject to disease or other health problems, especially regarding the elderly.
- Mentally fragile.
- Liable to fall from virtue or be led into sin; not strong against temptation; weak in resolution; unchaste.
Derived terms
[edit]Related terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]easily broken physically
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weak, infirm
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mentally fragile
liable to fall from virtue
- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.
Translations to be checked
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Noun
[edit]frail (plural frails)
- (dated, slang) A girl.
- 1931, Cab Calloway, Irving Mills, Minnie the Moocher:
- She was the roughest, toughest frail, but Minnie had a heart as big as a whale.
- 1934, F[rancis] Scott Fitzgerald, Tender is the Night: A Romance, New York, N.Y.: Charles Scribner’s Sons, →OCLC; republished as chapter X, in Malcolm Cowley, editor, Tender is the Night: A Romance [...] With the Author’s Final Revisions, New York, N.Y.: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1951, →OCLC, book IV (Escape: 1925–1929), page 238:
- There were five people in the Quirinal bar after dinner, a high-class Italian frail who sat on a stool making persistent conversation against the bartender's bored: “Si … Si … Si,” a light, snobbish Egyptian who was lonely but chary of the woman, and the two Americans.
- 1939, Raymond Chandler, The Big Sleep, Penguin, published 2011, page 148:
- ‘She's pickin' 'em tonight, right on the nose,’ he said. ‘That tall black-headed frail.’
- 1941, Preston Sturges, “Sullivan's Travels”, in Five Screenplays, →ISBN, page 77:
- Sullivan, the girl and the butler get to the ground. The girl wears a turtle-neck sweater, a cap slightly sideways, a torn coat, turned-up pants and sneakers.
SULLIVAN Why don't you go back with the car... You look about as much like a boy as Mae West.
THE GIRL All right, they'll think I'm your frail.
Verb
[edit]frail (third-person singular simple present frails, present participle frailing, simple past and past participle frailed)
- To play a stringed instrument, usually a banjo, by picking with the back of a fingernail.
Etymology 2
[edit]From Middle English frayel, from Old French frael, fraiel, of unknown origin; possibly a dissimilatory variant of flael, flaiel (“flail”).
Noun
[edit]frail (plural frails)
- A basket made of rushes, used chiefly to hold figs and raisins.
- The quantity of fruit or other items contained in a frail.
- A rush for weaving baskets.
Etymology 3
[edit](This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)
Noun
[edit]frail (plural frails)
- Synonym of farasola (“old unit of weight”)
References
[edit]- Henry Yule, A[rthur] C[oke] Burnell (1903) “frail”, in William Crooke, editor, Hobson-Jobson […] , London: John Murray, […].
Etymology 4
[edit]
Noun
[edit]frail (plural frails)
- (England, dialectal, obsolete) Synonym of flail.
- 1948, C. Henry Warren, The English Counties, Essex: Odhams, page 170:
- The scythe, the sickle and the flail (or "frail", is it is invariably called) - these should surely be incorporated in the county arms, for on their use much of the prosperity of Essex has always rested until now.
References
[edit]- “frail”, in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: G. & C. Merriam, 1913, →OCLC.
Anagrams
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