rutty

Etymology 1

rut + -y

adj

  1. Imprinted with ruts.
    a rutty country road
    But I’m oblig’d each day to roam Many a furlong from my home, And cry, good luck, whene’er I pick From off the ground a single stick; Or, in some long and rutty lane, I find by chance a single grain. 1767, George Saville Carey, “The Peasant and Ant. A Fable”, in The Hills of Hybla, London: for the author, page 14
    […] old acquaintances separated by long rutty distances, or cooled acquaintances separated by misunderstandings concerning runaway calves […] 1861, George Eliot, Silas Marner, Edinburgh: William Blackwood, Part 1, Chapter 10, p. 174
  2. (US, dated) In a rut (dull routine).
    Constantly vary your way of doing things; avoid humdrum, rutty, and monotonous ways. 1893, Frederick S. Parkhurst, Work and Workers: Practical Suggestions for the Junior Epworth League, New York: Hunt & Eaton, page 63
    Everywhere we see men who have gone to seed early, become rutty and uninteresting, because they worked too much and played too little. 1913, Orison Swett Marden, The Joys of Living, New York: Thomas Y. Crowell, page 97
    We get lazy, then the church becomes rutty. 1922, Edgar Hurst Cherington, chapter 23, in The Line is Busy,, New York: Abingdon Press, page 26
  3. Related to a rut; being in a state of sexual arousal.
    I am lying here stifling in the rutty goat smell 1970, Ramon Guthrie, “Loin de Moi …”, in Maximum Security Ward, New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, page 45
    You may even get picked up by a German soldier. They’re a rutty bunch now that they’re away from their fat frauleins and meeting some real French women. 2001, Fred Mustard Stewart, chapter 30, in The Savages in Love and War,, New York: Forge, page 275

Etymology 2

adj

  1. (obsolete) Full of roots.
    […] the shoare of siluer streaming Themmes, Whose rutty Bancke, the which his Riuer hemmes, Was paynted all with variable flowers, 1596, Edmund Spenser, Prothalamion, London: William Ponsonby
    […] whistling reeds, that rutty Iordan laues, And with their verdure his white head embraues, To chide the windes, 1610, Giles Fletcher, Christs Victorie, and Triumph in Heauen, and Earth, Over, and After Death, Cambridge, page 47

Etymology 3

From Hindi रत्ती (rattī), literally “the seed of the plant Abrus precatorius.”

noun

  1. (India, obsolete) A unit of weight used for metals, precious stones and medicines, equivalent to 1+¹⁄₂ grains.
    1768, Alexander Dow (translator), The History of Hindostan by Firishta, London: T. Becket and P.A. de Hondt, Volume 2, Section 12, p. 112, […] they immediately desired to capitulate, and sent him, by way of ransom, a perfect diamond weighing two hundred and twenty four ruttys […]
    1858, Henry Yule, Narrative of the Mission … to the Court of Ava, London: Smith, Elder, Appendix, “Note on Metals, Minerals, &c., of Burma,” p. 348, [Sapphires] of ten to fifteen rutties without a flaw are common, whereas a perfect ruby of that size is hardly ever seen.
    […] vast numbers of infatuated wretches have accustomed themselves to consume from 6 rutties (9 grains) to a rupee’s weight (180 grains) of nearly pure opium daily […] 1870, Norman Chevers, A Manual of Medical Jurisprudence for India, Calcutta: Thacker, Spink, page 227

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