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haggard (adj.)

1560s, "wild, unruly" (originally in reference to hawks), from French haggard, said in Watkins to be from Old French faulcon hagard "wild falcon," literally "falcon of the woods," from hagard, hagart, from Middle High German hag "hedge, copse, wood," from Proto-Germanic *hagon, from PIE root *kagh- "to catch, seize;" also "wickerwork, fence" (see hedge (n.)). OED, however, finds this derivation "very doubtful."

The sense perhaps was reinforced by Low German hager "gaunt, haggard," and influenced by association with hag. The meaning "with a haunted and wild expression" is recorded by 1690s; that of "careworn" by 1853. Related: Haggardly; haggardness.

also from 1560s
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Trends of haggard

updated on December 09, 2023

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