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cankered

American  
[kang-kerd] / ˈkæŋ kərd /

adjective

  1. morally corrupt.

  2. bad-tempered.

  3. (of plants)

    1. destroyed or having portions destroyed by the feeding of a cankerworm.

    2. having a cankerous part; infected with a canker.

  4. ulcerated.


Other Word Forms

Derived Forms

Etymology

Origin of cankered

late Middle English word dating back to 1375–1425; see origin at canker, -ed 3

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.

He has suffered for it: his health debilitated by frequent hunger strikes, his knees cankered with sores from long sessions of prayer, according to prison officials.

From Time • Jul. 28, 2010

Hamlet paused before coming to his point “I wish to discover whether a surgeon, by cutting out the cankered spot, could restore the vital spirit to perfection.”

From "Ophelia" by Lisa Klein

Meantime went Zephyrus across the sea, To bring her sisters to her arms again, Though of that message little was he fain, Knowing their malice and their cankered hearts.

From The Earthly Paradise A Poem by Morris, William

But it is more like a garden than the cankered cat-walk it once was.

From The New Gulliver and Other Stories by Pain, Barry

One of them spoke of such charming impudence, and George looked at her with his cankered eye.

From A Yankee from the West A Novel by Read, Opie Percival

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