wastrel
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]1847, waste + -rel (pejorative).[1]
Pronunciation
[edit]- IPA(key): /weɪstɹəl/
Audio (Southern England): (file)
Noun
[edit]wastrel (countable and uncountable, plural wastrels)
- (countable, dated) One who is profligate, who wastes time or resources extravagantly.
- 1902, John Buchan, The Outgoing of the Tide:
- And so with one thing and other the auld witch raised the fiends of jealousy in that innocent heart. She would cry out that Heriotside was an ill-doing wastrel, and had no business to come and flatter honest lassies.
- 1929 September, Virginia Woolf, A Room of One’s Own, uniform edition, London: Leonard and Virginia Woolf at the Hogarth Press, […], published 1931 (April 1935 printing), →OCLC, page 32:
- Mary’s mother—if that was her picture—may have been a wastrel in her spare time (she had thirteen children by a minister of the church), but if so her gay and dissipated life had left too few traces of its pleasures on her face.
- 2019 November 19, Tom Meadowcroft, “Unite to Remain could hurt the anti-Brexit cause. That’s why I’m no longer a Green candidate”, in The Guardian[1]:
- Party politics didn’t come naturally to me. I was a twentysomething crypto-anarchist wastrel from the outer suburbs of Bristol who’d spent five years after university moving between jobs and getting distracted.
- (countable, obsolete) A neglected child.
- (uncountable, obsolete) Refuse; rubbish.
Synonyms
[edit]- See also Thesaurus:spendthrift
Translations
[edit]A person who wastes resources and/or time.
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References
[edit]- ^ Douglas Harper (2001–2024) “wastrel”, in Online Etymology Dictionary.