Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. Sep 28, 2017 · Old English col "not warm" (but usually not as severe as cold), "moderately cold, neither warm nor very cold," also, figuratively, of persons, "unperturbed, undemonstrative, not excited or heated by passions," from Proto-Germanic *koluz (source also of Middle Dutch coel, Dutch ko.

    • 한국어 (Korean)

      haywire 뜻: 혼란스러운; "소매질용 부드러운 철사," 1891년에 hay + wire (n.)에서...

  3. American origin. Stupidity. What's the meaning of the phrase 'Go haywire'? To go wrong, to become overly excited or deranged. What's the origin of the phrase 'Go haywire'? Hay-wire is the light wire that was used in baling machines to tie up bales of hay. At the turn of the 20th century the expression 'a haywire outfit' began to be used in the USA.

  4. Jul 5, 2017 · This figurative use was primarily found in the phrase haywire outfit, first recorded in Terms used in Forestry and Logging (Washington, D.C. – 1905), a bulletin of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Forestry: Hay wire outfit. A contemptuous term for loggers with poor logging equipment. (Northern Forest)

  5. The noun haywire refers to a type of wire once used in baling hay and sometimes for makeshift repairs. This hurried and temporary use of haywire gave rise to the adjective (and sometimes adverb) haywire.

  6. Origin of: Haywire. Haywire. When things go wrong or out of control, they are said to go haywire. The expression originated in America in the early 20th century and its first use was to describe something that was makeshift or poorly constructed.

  7. Feb 8, 2024 · hay +‎ wire The original meaning of 'likely to become tangled unpredictably or unusably, or fall apart', as though only bound with the kind of soft, springy wire used to bind hay bales [1] comes from usage in New England lumber camps circa 1905 where haywire outfit became the common term to refer to slap-dash collections of logging tools.

  8. Word Origin. Idioms. go haywire. (informal) to stop working correctly or become out of control. After that, things started to go haywire. The clock seems to have gone a bit haywire. Take your English to the next level. The Oxford Learner’s Thesaurus explains the difference between groups of similar words.

  1. People also search for