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    • 1820s

      • Where does the verb discombobulate come from? The earliest known use of the verb discombobulate is in the 1820s. OED's earliest evidence for discombobulate is from 1825, in Hagers-Town (Maryland) Torch Light & Public Advertiser.
  1. Dec 10, 2018 · This doesn't help to explain why "combobulate" never became an actual word, but it gives a time frame for when "discombobulate" came into use. According to etymonline: 1834, Amer.Eng., fanciful coinage of a type popular then (originally discombobricate). Related: discombobulating; discombobulation. –

  2. Oct 15, 2024 · 1550s in a literal sense "mix or mingle things or ideas so as to render the elements indistinguishable;" from mid-18c. in the active, figurative sense of "perplex the mind or ideas of, discomfit in mind or feeling," but not in general use until after c. 1800.

  3. The meaning of DISCOMBOBULATE is to cause to be in a state of confusion : upset, disorient. How to use discombobulate in a sentence.

  4. Sep 28, 2017 · 1550s in a literal sense "mix or mingle things or ideas so as to render the elements indistinguishable;" from mid-18c. in the active, figurative sense of "perplex the mind or ideas of, discomfit in mind or feeling," but not in general use until after c. 1800.

  5. Feb 16, 2019 · When it first appeared in the U.S. in the early 1800s, discombobulate was just a playful, rootless coinage conveying a sense of confusion. It was probably inspired by similar words like discomfit and discompose, but the –bobulate part has no etymological origin.

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  7. Jan 14, 2021 · Discombobulate “to confuse, upset, or frustrate” was originally a jocular American coinage from the North Midland U.S. (from Ohio west through Indiana, Illinois, and Iowa, to Nebraska).

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