wonky
English
WOTD – 25 April 2009
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈwɒŋ.kɪ/
- (General American) enPR: wŏngʹkē, IPA(key): /ˈwɑŋ.ki/, /ˈwɔŋ.ki/
Audio (US) (file) Audio (AU) (file) - Rhymes: -ɒŋki
Etymology 1
From English dialectal wanky, alteration of Middle English wankel (“unstable, shaky”), from Old English wancol (“unstable”), from Proto-West Germanic *wankul (“swaying, shaky, unstable”).
Adjective
wonky (comparative wonkier, superlative wonkiest)
- Lopsided, misaligned or off-centre.
- Synonyms: awry, misaligned, skew-whiff
- 2016 April 2, “Afghan Business (Afghan Dan Send)”, performed by Dylan Brewer and Little T (Josh Tate):
- Who's this gimp with a wonky eye / I don't know but his lips are dry
- (chiefly British, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland) Feeble, shaky or rickety.
- Synonym: rickety
- 1932, Frank Richards, The Magnet: The Terror of the Form:
- It seemed likely that he would need First Aid when those wonky steps yielded, at length, to the well-known law of gravitation.
- (informal, computing) Suffering from intermittent bugs.
- (informal) Generally incorrect.
Derived terms
Noun
wonky (uncountable)
- (music) A subgenre of electronic music employing unstable rhythms, complex time signatures, and mid-range synths.
- 2015, Jan Kyrre Berg O. Friis, Robert P. Crease, Technoscience and Postphenomenology: The Manhattan Papers:
- By the late 2000s, dubstep had splintered into numerous factions, from brostep to wonky to the evocative “purple,” […]
Adjective
wonky (comparative wonkier, superlative wonkiest)
- Technically worded, in the style of jargon.
- 2009, Jesse Dale Holcomb, Faith, Science and Trust: Climate Change Framing Effects and Conservative Protestant Opinion, archived from the original on 7 March 2016:
- Climate change is an issue that might lend itself more easily to thematic framing in the news, due to the often highly technical and wonky language required to explain it.
- 2023 July 6, Erin Griffith, David Yaffe-Bellany, “How Tom Brady’s Crypto Ambitions Collided With Reality”, in The New York Times, →ISSN:
- During the boom times, Paris Hilton, Snoop Dogg, Reese Witherspoon and Matt Damon all gushed about or invested in crypto projects, bringing a mainstream audience to the wonky world of digital currencies.
Anagrams
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