screwed

English dictionary entry

Meanings

adj
  1. Beset with unfortunate circumstances that seem difficult or impossible to overcome; in imminent danger.
  2. Intoxicated.
verb
  1. simple past and past participle of screw

Pronunciation

en-us-screwed.ogg

Word forms

screwed more screwed most screwed

Etymology

From screw + -ed. * The modern sense of screwed originates in the mid-1600s with a sense of to screw as a means of "exerting pressure or coercion", probably in reference to instruments of torture (e.g. thumbscrews). It quickly gained a wider general sense of "in a bind; in unfortunate inescapable circumstances". When the verb screw gained a sexual connotation in the early 1700s, it joined the long-lasting association of sexual imagery as a metaphor for domination, leading to screwed gaining synonyms like fucked and shagged. On a more general note, this is a prime example of the frequent tendency for verb participles to evolve into participial adjectives. * The sense meaning "intoxicated" is from the early 1800s, and is associated with the term screwy, and the idiom to have a screw loose.

Related words

Derived words

screwed and chopped screwed, blued and tattooed / screwed, glued and tattooed screwedness
This entry uses open data from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA/GFDL). Word forms are used for search and are not indexed as separate pages.