Tuesday, July 29, 2025

Wrack

 As if to specifically reassure me and prove Grim right, WRACK was one of the entries on Octordle today.

2 comments:

  1. I think wrack is related to wreck and wreak. Here's some examples from the OED:

    For wrack (noun):

    I.2.a.
    c1407–
    Damage, disaster, or injury to a person, state, etc., by reason of force, outrage, or violence; devastation, destruction.
    In very frequent use from c1580 to c1640.

    1561
    Loe, here..the wofull wracke And vtter ruine of this noble realme!
    T. Norton & T. Sackville, Gorboduc v. ii

    And: wrack (verb)

    1.
    1470–1632
    † intransitive. To suffer or undergo shipwreck. Obsolete.

    1470–85
    One told hym there was a knyghte of kyng Arthur þ[a]t had wrackyd on the rockes. -- T. Malory, Morte d'Arthur viii. xxxviii. 331

    2.
    1562–
    To wreck (a vessel, mariners, etc.); to ruin or cast ashore by shipwreck. Chiefly passive and in figurative context.

    3.a.
    1564–
    To cause the ruin, downfall, or subversion of (a person, etc.); to ruin, overthrow. Also reflexive.

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