out of joint
English
Prepositional phrase
- (anatomy) dislocated
- I fell over and put my shoulder out of joint
- Disordered, out of control, chaotic.
- c. 1600, William Shakespeare, Hamlet, Act I, Scene 5,
- The time is out of joint. O cursed spite
- That ever I was born to set it right!
- 1866, Elizabeth Gaskell, Wives and Daughters, Chapter 31,
- Her stepmother had whimsical moods; and if Cynthia displeased her, she would oppress Molly with small kindnesses and pseudo-affection. Or else everything was wrong, the world was out of joint, and Molly had failed in her mission to set it right, and was to be blamed accordingly.
- c. 1600, William Shakespeare, Hamlet, Act I, Scene 5,
- Not in harmony, in step or in line (with something).
- 1933, Robert Byron, First Russia, Then Tibet, London: Macmillan, Part I, Chapter 5, p. 71,
- While the Kremlin at Moscow exhales a paradoxical sympathy with this renewal of old tradition, Leningrad seems out of joint with Bolshevism and wears a sad air, as though mourning for an interlude which is past.
- 1933, Robert Byron, First Russia, Then Tibet, London: Macmillan, Part I, Chapter 5, p. 71,
Derived terms
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