measly
English
WOTD – 6 May 2017
Etymology
measle (“singular of measles”) + -y; the word measle is either from Middle Dutch masel (“a blister filled with blood; a pustule, a skin blemish”), or Middle Low German masel (“a red skin blemish”), from Proto-Germanic *masuraz (“a knot or scar in wood; a knarl”), from *mas-, *mēs- (“a spot; a sore; a scar”), from Proto-Indo-European *mos- (“a skin sore”).
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈmiːzli/
- (General American) IPA(key): /ˈmizli/
Audio (AU) (file) - Hyphenation: meas‧ly
Adjective
measly (comparative measlier, superlative measliest)
- Particularly of pigs or pork: infected with larval tapeworms or trichinae (parasitic roundworms). [from late 16th c.]
- 1847, William Youatt, The Pig: A Treatise on the Breeds, Management, Feeding, and Medical Treatment, of Swine; with Directions for Salting Pork, and Curing Bacon and Hams, page 113:
- Then take five or six apples, pick out the cores and fill up the holes thus made with flour of brimstone; stop up the holes and cast in the apples to the measly hog.
- 1847, William Youatt, The Pig: A Treatise on the Breeds, Management, Feeding, and Medical Treatment, of Swine; with Directions for Salting Pork, and Curing Bacon and Hams, page 113:
- Of a person: infected with measles.
- 1902, The Epworth Herald
- A measly boy, he looked like a tramp, probably one of the street boys from the village, just walked up here and made himself at home, and when I told him to leave, he wouldn't.
- 1902, The Epworth Herald
- (figuratively, informal) Small (especially contemptibly small) in amount. [from mid 19th c.]
- 2004, Richard Rizun, Ora, Trafford Publishing (→ISBN)
- The visiting tourists eagerly forked over a measly two dollars per group to their guides as payment for their services. This amount was measly sum to the givers, but a princely sum to the takers.
- 2010, Marylee Daniel Mitcham, Blacktime Song by Rosalie Wolfe, Strategic Book Publishing (→ISBN), page 127:
- So it wasn't a hotel, as I said in my novel, just a measly motel. But to me it was like the First measly motel, and I remember laughing about the things I was saying straight from my unconscious to both his and God's ear.
- 2004, Richard Rizun, Ora, Trafford Publishing (→ISBN)
Translations
References
- “measly” (US) / “measly” (UK) in Oxford Dictionaries, Oxford University Press.
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