ravelled
English
editEtymology 1
editAdjective
editravelled (comparative more ravelled, superlative most ravelled)
- Entwined together; tangled.
- 1871, Popular Science News, page 61:
- [I]n them are minute glands, which resemble ravelled tubes […]
- Unravelled; frayed.
- (figuratively) Complicated; confused; involved.
- 1660, Edmund Waller, To the King, upon his Majesty's Happy Return:
- What glory's due to him that could divide / Such ravelled interests?
- (programming) Of a variable in the APL programming language: which has been reshaped into a vector.
- 1975, Tse-yun Feng, Parallel processing: proceedings of the Sagamore Computer Conference:
- LOAD.S loads a sequence of scalars from the ravelled form of a matrix into successive AM elements.
Verb
editravelled
- simple past and past participle of ravel
Etymology 2
editOrigin unknown.[2]
Adjective
editravelled (not comparable)
Derived terms
editReferences
edit- ^ “ravelled | raveled, adj.2”, in OED Online , Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, December 2020.
- ^ “ravelled | raveled, adj.1”, in OED Online , Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, December 2020.