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    banjax
    /ˈbandʒaks/

    verb

    • 1. ruin, incapacitate, or break: informal "he banjaxed his knee in the sixth game of the season"

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  3. verb. ban· jax ˈban-ˌjaks. banjaxed; banjaxing; banjaxes. transitive verb. chiefly Ireland. : damage, ruin. also : smash. Word History. Etymology. origin unknown. First Known Use. 1939, in the meaning defined above. Time Traveler. The first known use of banjax was in 1939. See more words from the same year. Dictionary Entries Near banjax.

  4. Informal to ruin or destroy, often as a result of incompetence.... Click for English pronunciations, examples sentences, video.

  5. Jun 2, 2024 · banjax (plural banjaxes) (chiefly Ireland, informal) A mess or undesirable situation made as a result of incompetence.

  6. Define banjax. banjax synonyms, banjax pronunciation, banjax translation, English dictionary definition of banjax. tr.v. ban·jaxed , ban·jax·ing , ban·jax·es Chiefly Irish Slang To ruin or destroy: "Having to pay for Emma's lodgings every week had completely banjaxed his...

  7. www.wordorigins.org › big-list-entries › banjaxbanjax - Wordorigins.org

    Mar 18, 2020 · It’s Irish slang meaning to batter or ruin. Banjax is first recorded as a noun meaning a mess in 1925, when Sean O’Casey uses it in his play Juno and the Paycock: I’m tellin’ you the scholar, Bentham, made a banjax o’ the Will. The word seems to have been a favorite of Flann O’Brien. The adjective appears in his 1939 At Swim-Two-Birds:

  8. Definitions from Wiktionary (banjax) verb : (UK, originally Ireland, slang) To ruin or destroy. noun : (chiefly Ireland, informal) A mess or undesirable situation made as a result of incompetence.

  9. transitive verb To ruin or destroy. from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. verb UK, slang To ruin or destroy. noun informal A mess or undesirable situation made as a result of incompetence. Etymologies. from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition. [Origin unknown.]

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