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Ramshackle

ram·​shack·​le | \ ˈram-ˌsha-kəl  \

adjective

1: appearing ready to collapse RICKETY

2: carelessly or loosely constructed

The Evolution of Ramshackle

Ramshackle has nothing to do with rams, nor the act of being rammed, nor shackles. The word is an alteration of ransackled, an obsolete form of the verb ransack, meaning “to search through or plunder.” (Ransack in turn derives, via Middle English, from Old Norse words meaning “house” and “seek.”) A home that has been ransacked has had its contents thrown into disarray, and that image may be what caused us to start using ramshackle in the first half of the 19th century to describe something that is poorly constructed or in a state of near collapse. These days, ramshackle can also be used figuratively, as in “He could only devise a ramshackle excuse for his absence.”