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Showing Results for "shambles"
See Also:
  • present tense form of shamble (3rd person singular).
Synonyms

shambles

British  
/ ˈʃæmbəlz /

noun

  1. a place of great disorder

    the room was a shambles after the party

  2. a place where animals are brought to be slaughtered

  3. any place of slaughter or carnage

  4. dialect a row of covered stalls or shops where goods, originally meat, are sold

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Etymology

Origin of shambles

C14 shamble table used by meat vendors, from Old English sceamel stool, from Late Latin scamellum a small bench, from Latin scamnum stool

Explanation

Originally a word for a slaughterhouse, shambles now usually means "one heck of a mess," as in "You were supposed to clean your room, but it's still a shambles!" When the job market is in a shambles, people have trouble finding work. When a supermarket is in a shambles, there might be melons and milk spilled all over the floor. If everyone in a classroom is talking and yelling at once, the class is a shambles because no one can hear each other or get any work done. People say things are "in shambles" or "a shambles" — they mean the same thing. However you say it, a shambles is chaotic, disorderly, out of hand, and off the hook — a major, five-alarm mess.

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Vocabulary lists containing shambles

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Behind the scenes, Gibbard’s personal life was in shambles.

From Los Angeles Times • Jun. 5, 2026

But, shambles or not, going into next week, it is not clear if the PM of the day will keep his job.

From BBC • May 2, 2026

He said that his life was in shambles.

From Slate • Apr. 19, 2026

Under US pressure, she is grappling with leading a country saddled with the world's largest proven oil reserves but an economy in shambles.

From Barron's • Mar. 26, 2026

It was not wide enough either to carry all the transport for an offensive and the Austrians could make a shambles out of it.

From "A Farewell To Arms" by Ernest Hemingway

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