{"id":10646,"date":"2022-11-16T22:16:38","date_gmt":"2022-11-16T22:16:38","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/english-grammar-lessons.com\/?p=10646"},"modified":"2022-11-16T22:16:38","modified_gmt":"2022-11-16T22:16:38","slug":"rack-and-ruin-meaning","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/english-grammar-lessons.com\/rack-and-ruin-meaning\/","title":{"rendered":"Rack and Ruin \u2013 Meaning, Origin and Usage"},"content":{"rendered":"
Did your friend tell you the local cinema is going to \"rack and ruin?\"<\/em><\/strong> This post unpacks the meaning and origin of this expression.<\/p>\n The expression \"rack and ruin\"<\/em> means something is falling into a state of disrepair or complete destruction<\/u>. For instance, the local cinema might be falling into rack and ruin<\/em> due to it not bringing in any money during the pandemic. It means something previously in good condition, experiencing severe neglect, ruining its appearance and use.<\/u><\/p>\n \"This company is going to the dogs. Since new management took over, it's gone to rack and ruin. I don't think it will ever be the same. It's a matter of time til they file for bankruptcy.\"<\/p>\n \"What's with our football team lately. It's like they're going to rack and ruin. We need a few new players to stop this spiral if we want to make the playoffs this year.\"<\/p>\n \"This car has gone to rack and ruin over the last two years. I don't have the money to service it, and it's a matter of time til I break down on the freeway.\"<\/p>\n \"That couple let their relationship go to rack and ruin. It's a good example of how you must nurture your partner's needs and remain reciprocal in the relationship.\"<\/p>\n \"Is there any way we can stop this from going to rack and ruin? I don't know how we can bring this back from the brink, do you?\"<\/p>\n \"Are you going to help me renovate the house this weekend? If I don't do something soon, it will go to rack and ruin.\"<\/p>\n \"We let the school go to rack and ruin. We should have put more thought into choosing the right staff.\"<\/p>\n <\/p>\n The expression \"rack and ruin\" originates from the word \"wreck.\" Many people mistakenly confuse this saying as originating from the medieval torture device known as \"the rack.\"<\/p>\n However, the now defunct work \"wrack\" is a tautology of the word \"ruin,\" leading to its incorporation in the saying \"wrack and ruin\" to describe something that's in tatters or destroyed.<\/p>\n The expression \"going to wreck\" was the predecessor of \"rack and ruin,\" with records showing this phrase being in use as early as 1548, where it appears in a sermon by the clergyman Ephraim Udall and reads as follows.<\/p>\n \"The flocke goeth to wrecke and vtterly perisheth.\"<\/p>\n The author, Henry Bull. Progressed the phrase into \"wrack and ruin\" in a translation of \"Luther's Commentarie upon the fiftene psalmes,\" published in 1577, where it reads as follows.<\/p>\n \"Whiles all things seeme to fall to wracke and ruine.\"<\/p>\n The modem version of \"rack and ruin\" appeared in 1599, with historian Thomas Fowler publishing his work, \"The history of Corpus Christi College,\" where the saying reads as follows.<\/p>\n \"In the mean season, the College shall goe to rack and ruin.\"<\/p>\nMeaning<\/h2>\n
Example Usage<\/h2>\n
Origin<\/h2>\n