out of whack
See also: out-of-whack
English
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Adjective
editout of whack (comparative more out of whack, superlative most out of whack)
- (colloquial, idiomatic) Wrong, broken; specifically:
- 2024 September 11, Richard Brody, ““Winner” Takes Political Comedy Seriously”, in The New Yorker[1]:
- In its hearty directness, “Winner” suggests that being mad as hell at a system that’s out of whack is as American as Hollywood itself.
- Not in proper balance; unbalanced.
- Our priorities have gotten out of whack.
- Not in proper alignment.
- The floor is so out of whack that the door hits it when opened.
- Not working or operating properly.
- My banged-up left knee is out of whack.
Usage notes
edit- The unhyphenated spelling is usually used predicatively, and the hyphenated spelling usually occurs when the phrase appears before the word it modifies.
Translations
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