fraught
English
Etymology
From Middle English, from Middle Dutch vracht or Middle Low German vracht (“freight money”), ultimately from Proto-Germanic *fra- (intensive prefix) + Proto-Germanic *aihtiz (“possession”), from Proto-Indo-European *h₂eyḱ- (“to possess”). Cognate with Old High German frēht (“earnings”), Old English ǣht (“owndom”), and a doublet of freight. More at for-, own. Adjective from Middle English, passive participle of the verb fraughten, from Middle Dutch vrachten.
Adjective
fraught (comparative more fraught, superlative most fraught)
- Distressed or causing distress, for example through complexity.
- a fraught relationship; a fraught process
- 2014 October 21, Oliver Brown, “Oscar Pistorius jailed for five years – sport afforded no protection against his tragic fallibilities: Bladerunner's punishment for killing Reeva Steenkamp is but a frippery when set against the burden that her bereft parents, June and Barry, must carry [print version: No room for sentimentality in this tragedy, 13 September 2014, p. S22]”, in The Daily Telegraph (Sport):
- But ever since the concept of "hamartia" recurred through Aristotle's Poetics, in an attempt to describe man's ingrained iniquity, our impulse has been to identify a telling defect in those brought suddenly and dramatically low. With [Oscar] Pistorius, that task is fraught.
- (of a cargo-carrier) Laden.
- Shakespeare
- a vessel of our country richly fraught
- Shakespeare
- (figuratively, with with) Loaded up, charged or accompanied.
- (with with) Furnished, equipped.
Translations
laden
charged or accompanied with
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distressed
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Noun
fraught (usually uncountable, plural fraughts)
- (obsolete) The hire of a ship or boat to transport cargo.
- (obsolete) Money paid to hire a ship or boat to transport cargo; freight
- fraught money.
- (obsolete) The transportation of goods, especially in a ship or boat.
- (obsolete) A ship's cargo, lading or freight.
- 1596, William Shakespeare and Thomas Kyd (uncertain), Edward III, Act III, scene iv:
- […] And now behold after my winters toyle, / My paynefull voyage on the boyſtrous ſea, / Of warres deuouring gulphes and ſteely rocks, / I bring my fraught vnto the wiſhed port / My Summers hope, my trauels ſweet reward […]
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- (Scotland) A load; a burden.
- (Scotland) Two bucketfuls (of water).
Derived terms
- fraught-free
Verb
fraught (third-person singular simple present fraughts, present participle fraughting, simple past and past participle fraughted)
- (transitive, obsolete except in past participle) To load (a ship, cargo etc.).
- (intransitive, obsolete) To form the cargo of a vessel.
- 1610, The Tempest, by Shakespeare
- Had I been any god of power, I would / Have sunk the sea within the earth, or e'er / It should the good ship so have swallow'd and / The fraughting souls within her.
- 1610, The Tempest, by Shakespeare
Related terms
References
- “fraught” in The Oxford English Dictionary, 2nd edition, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1989, →ISBN.
- “fraught” in Douglas Harper, Online Etymology Dictionary, 2001–2019.
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