debacle
English
Etymology
From French débâcle, from débâcler (“to unbar; unleash”) from prefix dé- (“un-”) + bâcler (“to dash, bind, bar, block”) [perhaps from unattested Middle French and Old French *bâcler, *bacler (“to hold in place, prop a door or window open”)], from Vulgar Latin *bacculare, from Latin baculum (“rod, staff used for support”), from Proto-Indo-European *bak-.
Also attested in Old French desbacler (“to clear a harbour by getting ships unloaded to make room for incoming ships with lading”) and in Occitan baclar (“to close”).
The hypothesised derivation from Middle Dutch *bakkelen (“to freeze artificially, lock in place”), a frequentative of bakken (“to stick, stick hard, glue together”) no longer seems likely due to the lack of attestation of *bakkelen in Middle Dutch and by it having the limited meaning of "freeze superficially" in Dutch.
Pronunciation
Noun
debacle (plural debacles)
- An event or enterprise that ends suddenly and disastrously, often with humiliating consequences. [from early 19th c.]
- 1952, Boaz Cohen, Epistle to Yemen, translation of original by Maimonides, page 5:
- The event proved to be a great debacle for the partisans of this prognosticator.
- 2007, “Statement by Peter Van Tuyn”, in BP pipeline failure: hearing before the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, page 46:
- The BP Prudhoe Bay debacle [the Prudhoe Bay oil spill] thus provides but the latest in a long line of reasons why leasing this region of the NPR-A is a bad idea.
- (ecology) A breaking up of a natural dam, usually made of ice, by a river and the ensuing rush of water.
- 1836, Henry De La Beche, How to Observe: Geology, page 69:
- […] so that in extreme cases the latter may even be dammed up for a time, and a debacle be the consequence, when the main river overcomes the resistance opposed to it, […]
Usage notes
- The older spelling with accents is no longer listed at all or only mentioned as an alternative in the online versions of most major British and American dictionaries.
Synonyms
- (An event or enterprise that ends suddenly and disastrously): fiasco
Translations
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References
- 2005, Ed. Catherine Soanes and Angus Stevenson, The Oxford Dictionary of English (2nd edition revised), Oxford University Press, →ISBN
- 1998, The Dorling Kindersley Illustrated Oxford Dictionary, Dorling Kindersley Limited and Oxford University Press, →ISBN, page 211
- 2006, Ed. Michael Allaby, A Dictionary of Ecology, Oxford University Press, →ISBN
- 1999, Ed. Robert Allen, Pocket Fowler's Modern English Usage, Oxford University Press, →ISBN
- 1999, Ed. Jennifer Speake, The Oxford Essential Dictionary of Foreign Terms in English, Oxford University Press, →ISBN
Anagrams
Dutch
Alternative forms
- (before 1996) debâcle
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /deːˈbaː.kəl/, /dəˈbaː.kəl/
Audio (file) - Hyphenation: de‧ba‧cle
- Rhymes: -aːkəl
Spanish
Further reading
- “debacle”, in Diccionario de la lengua española, Vigésima tercera edición, Real Academia Española, 2014
Swedish
Declension
Declension of debacle | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Singular | Plural | |||
Indefinite | Definite | Indefinite | Definite | |
Nominative | debacle | debaclet | debacle | debaclen |
Genitive | debacles | debaclets | debacles | debaclens |