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shambles

 - 6 dictionary results

sham⋅ble

1[sham-buhl]
–noun
1. shambles, (used with a singular or plural verb)
a. a slaughterhouse.
b. any place of carnage.
c. any scene of destruction: to turn cities into shambles.
d. any scene, place, or thing in disorder: Her desk is a shambles.
2. British Dialect. a butcher's shop or stall.

Origin:
bef. 900; ME shamel, OE sc(e)amel stool, table < LL scamellum, L scamillum, dim. of L scamnum bench; cf. G Schemel

sham⋅ble

2[sham-buhl] verb, -bled, -bling, noun
–verb (used without object)
1. to walk or go awkwardly; shuffle.
–noun
2. a shambling gait.

Origin:
1675–85; perh. short for shamble-legs one that walks wide (i.e., as if straddling), reminiscent of the legs of a shamble 1 (in earlier sense “butcher's table”)
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2010.
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sham·ble   (shām'bəl)   
intr.v.   sham·bled, sham·bling, sham·bles
To walk in an awkward, lazy, or unsteady manner, shuffling the feet.
n.  A shuffling gait.

[Probably from obsolete shamble, awkward, ungainly, from Middle English schamil, butcher's table; see shambles.]
sham·bles   (shām'bəlz)   
pl.n.   (used with a sing. verb)
    1. A scene or condition of complete disorder or ruin: "The economy was in a shambles" (W. Bruce Lincoln).

    2. Great clutter or jumble; a total mess: made dinner and left the kitchen a shambles.

    3. A place or scene of bloodshed or carnage.

    4. A scene or condition of great devastation.

    1. A place or scene of bloodshed or carnage.

    2. A scene or condition of great devastation.

  1. A slaughterhouse.

  2. Archaic A meat market or butcher shop.


[From Middle English shamel, shambil, place where meat is butchered and sold, from Old English sceamol, table, from Latin scabillum, scamillum, diminutive of scamnum, bench, stool.]
Word History: A place or situation referred to as a shambles is usually a mess, but it is no longer always the bloody mess it once was. The history of the word begins innocently enough with the Latin word scamnum, "a stool or bench serving as a seat, step, or support for the feet, for example." The diminutive scamillum, "low stool," was borrowed by speakers of Old English as sceamol, "stool, bench, table." Old English sceamol became Middle English shamel, which developed the specific sense in the singular and plural of "a place where meat is butchered and sold." The Middle English compound shamelhouse meant "slaughterhouse," a sense that the plural shambles developed (first recorded in 1548) along with the figurative sense "a place or scene of bloodshed" (first recorded in 1593). Our current, more generalized meaning, "a scene or condition of disorder," is first recorded in 1926.
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2009 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
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Word Origin & History

shamble  (v.)
"to walk with a shuffling gait," 1681, from an adj. meaning "ungainly, awkward" (1607), from shamble (n.) "table, bench" (see shambles) perhaps on the notion of the splayed legs of bench, or the way a worker sits astride it. Cf. Fr. bancal "bow-legged, wobbly" (of furniture), prop. "bench-legged," from banc "bench."

shambles 
1477, "meat or fish market," from schamil "table, stall for vending" (c.1305), from O.E. scomul, sceamel "stool, footstool, table for vending," an early W.Gmc. borrowing (cf. O.S. skamel, M.Du. schamel, O.H.G. scamel, Ger. schemel) from L. scamillus "low stool," ultimately a dim. of scamnum "stool, bench," from PIE base *skabh- "to prop up, support." In Eng., sense evolved to "slaughterhouse" (1548), "place of butchery" (1593), and "confusion, mess" (1901).
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2001 Douglas Harper
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