English edit

Verb edit

wrapped up

  1. simple past and past participle of wrap up

Adjective edit

wrapped up (comparative more wrapped up, superlative most wrapped up)

  1. Involved with; distracted by.
    • 1833, Alain René Le Sage, Thomas Roscoe, The Adventures of Gil Blas of Santillane - Volume 2, page 2:
      I found my new master more wrapped up than ever in Seraphina; his Seraphina equally wrapped up in my master, and Don Cæsar just as much wrapped up as either in the contemplation of the happy couple.
    • 2001, Edward Bloor, Tangerine, page 92:
      Maybe during football season I'm more wrapped up with what Erik's doing.
    • 2013, Carol Williamson, Can't You See Me?, page 128:
      I think if he had had other relations, he would cope better, but he had no aunts or uncles or even grandparents to talk to, and as his dad got on with living with his girlfriend and his sister became more and more wrapped up in her boyfriend, he was sadly on his own.
    • 2014, Donald Capps, Laughter Ever After: Ministry of Good Humor, page 83:
      She gives us all a lot of meaningless busy work, and she herself is so wrapped up in busy work that she doesn't know the difference between productive work and the appearance of working.
  2. Entangled in.
    • 2006, 2006, The Mask Handbook: A Practical Guide, page 13:
      In our secular society, the use and understanding of the mask, outside of entertainment, has become wrapped up in superstition, which one could argue is what happens to a society when it ditches its religious beliefs, beliefs central to that society.