ran·kle
(rngkl)
v. ran·kled, ran·kling,
ran·kles
v.intr.
1. To cause persistent irritation or
resentment.
2. To become sore or inflamed;
fester. v.tr.
To embitter; irritate. [Middle English ranclen, from Old French
rancler, alteration of draoncler, from
draoncle, festering sore, from Latin dracunculus,
diminutive of drac, dracn-,
serpent; see dragon.]
Word History: A persistent resentment, a
festering sore, and a little snake are all coiled together in the history
of the word rankle. "A little snake" is the sense of the Latin word
dracunculus to which rankle can be traced,
dracunculus being a diminutive of drac, "snake." The Latin word
passed into Old French, as draoncle, having probably already
developed the sense "festering sore," because some of these sores
resembled little snakes in their shape or bite. The verb draoncler,
"to fester," was then formed in Old French. The noun and verb developed
alternate forms without the d-, and both were borrowed into Middle
English, the noun rancle being recorded in a work written around
1190, the verb ranclen, in a work probably composed about 1300.
Both words had literal senses having to do with festering sores. The noun
is not recorded after the 16th century, but the verb went on to develop
the figurative senses having to do with resentment and bitterness with
which we are all too familiar. |
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition copyright ©2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.