struggle

English dictionary entry

Meanings

noun
  1. A contortion of the body in an attempt to escape or to perform a difficult task.
  2. Strife, contention, great effort.
verb
  1. To strive, to labour in difficulty, to fight (for or against), to contend.
  2. To have difficulty with something.
  3. To strive, or to make efforts, with a twisting, or with contortions of the body.

Pronunciation

/ˈstɹʌɡəl/ [ˈstɹʌɡl̩] en-us-struggle.ogg LL-Q1860 (eng)-Vealhurl-struggle.wav

Word forms

struggle struggles stroggell strogell struggling struggled

Etymology

From Middle English struglen, stroglen, strogelen, of obscure origin. Cognate with Scots strugil (“to struggle, grapple, contend”). Perhaps from a variant of *strokelen, *stroukelen (> English stroll), from Middle Dutch struyckelen ("to stumble, trip, falter"; > Modern Dutch struikelen), the frequentative form of Old Dutch *strūkon (“to stumble”), from Proto-Germanic *strūkōną, *strūkēną (“to be stiff”), from Proto-Indo-European *strug-, *ster- (“to be stiff; to bristle, strut, stumble, fall”), related to Middle Low German strûkelen ("to stumble"; > Low German strükeln), Old High German strūhhēn, strūhhōn ("to stumble, trip, tumble, go astray"; > German strauchen, straucheln). Alternative etymology derives the base of struggle from Old Norse strúgr (“arrogance, pride, spitefulness, ill-will”) + -le (frequentative suffix), from Proto-Germanic *strūkaz (“stiff, rigid”), ultimately from the same Proto-Indo-European root above, which would make it cognate with dialectal Swedish strug (“contention, strife, discord”), Norwegian stru (“obstinate, unruly”), Danish struende (“reluctantly”), Scots strug (“difficulty, perplexity, a laborious task”).

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