addicting

English

Etymology

addict + -ing

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /əˈdɪktɪŋ/

Verb

addicting

  1. present participle of addict

Adjective

addicting (comparative more addicting, superlative most addicting)

  1. (US) Causing addiction.
    • 1936, June 1, quoting Nathan Browne Eddy, Morphine Substitutes:
      whether any of the substances possess addicting properties is very difficult to determine on animals, although efforts are being made to study this aspect of the problem on dogs and monkeys.
    • 1950, Council on Drugs (American Medical Association); Council on Pharmacy and Chemistry (American Medical Association), New and Nonofficial Drugs, page 42:
      similar in action to codeine salts but when compared with codeine on the basis of weight is more active, and more addicting.
    • 1957, United States Congress. Senate. Committee on the Judiciary, Juvenile Delinquency (Treatment and Rehabilitation of Juvenile Drug Addicts), page 182:
      When we didn't have narcotics laws, when we could go and buy this stuff like you could candy and potatoes, laudanum was a very addicting drug
    • 1992, Barbara C. Wallace, The Chemically Dependent: Phases of Treatment and Recovery‎, page 22:
      Cocaine has been reconceptualized as our most addicting drug and crack is viewed as the most addicting form of cocaine
    • 2000, Robert L. DuPont; Betty Ford, The Selfish Brain: Learning from Addiction‎, page 101:
      That is why smoking and intravenous injection are the routes of administration chosen by addicted people and why these routes of administration are so much more addicting than is oral use of the same drug.

Usage notes

  • Considered non-standard outside of the United States.
  • Addictive also has the meaning "characterised by addiction", as in "an addictive personality", which addicting does not.

Synonyms

Derived terms

Verb

addicting

  1. present participle of addict
    • 1686, John Scott, The Christian Life: From Its Beginning to Its Consummation in Glory, page 60:
      For though in his Nature there is a Tendency to Rational Pleasures, yet this he may, and very frequently does, stifle and extinguish by addicting himself wholly to the Delights and Gratifications of his Sense
    • 1898, New York (State). Dept. of Health, Annual Report, page 371:
      Mr. Johnson's communication states that the preparation "has a large sale, and is addicting the public to its use"

References

  • Dictionaries without an entry for this adjective include: Larousse Gran Diccionario Inglés-Español/Spanish-English, Merriam-Webster Online, MSN Encarta Dictionary, Webster’s Third New World International Dictionary, American Heritage Dictionary (online), Random House Dictionary (online).
  • However, it is in the Oxford English Dictionary where it is listed as informal, with citations going back to 1939.
  • addicting at OneLook Dictionary Search
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.