Etymology
(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium. Particularly: “The reference given does not support most of the claims.”)
From screw + -ed.
- The modern sense of screwed originates in the mid-1600s with a sense of to screw as a means of "exerting pressure or coercion", probably in reference to instruments of torture (e.g. thumbscrews).[1] It quickly gained a wider general sense of "in a bind; in unfortunate inescapable circumstances". When the verb screw gained a sexual connotation in the early 1700s,[2] it joined the long-lasting association of sexual imagery as a metaphor for domination, leading to screwed gaining synonyms like fucked and shagged. On a more general note, this is a prime example of the frequent tendency for verb participles to evolve into participial adjectives.
- The sense meaning "intoxicated" is from the early 1800s, and is associated with the term screwy, and the idiom to have a screw loose.[1]
Adjective
screwed (comparative more screwed, superlative most screwed)
- (slang, mildly vulgar) Beset with unfortunate circumstances that seem difficult or impossible to overcome; in imminent danger.
They found out about our betrayal, so now we're screwed.
- (slang, British, dated) Intoxicated.
1889, Belgravia, volume 70, page 15:" […] Did you know that my husband came home intoxicated?"
Mrs. Brown laughed.
"Oh, not so bad as that, surely! Only a little 'screwed.' George was 'quisby,' too. But then its Christmas, you know."
1904–1907 (date written), James Joyce, “The Dead”, in Dubliners, London: Grant Richards, published June 1914, →OCLC:Besides they were dreadfully afraid that Freddy Malins might turn up screwed. They would not wish for worlds that any of Mary Jane's pupils should see him under the influence […]
Usage notes
Because the sexual act as a metaphor for domination is a frequent association for the term 'screwed', it is potentially offensive in polite circles.
Translations
beset with unfortunate circumstances
- Catalan: fotut (ca), fastiguejat (ca), putejat (ca) (slang informal)
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 完蛋 (zh) (wándàn)
- Finnish: pulassa, kusessa
- French: foutu (fr)
- German: in der Scheiße stecken (de)
- Japanese: 一巻の終わり (いっかんのおわり, ikkan no owari)
- Portuguese: fodido (pt), lixado (pt), quilhado, tramado
- Russian: (used predicatively, e.g. ему́ кранты́! - he is screwed!) кранты́ (ru) m pl (krantý), хана́ (ru) f (xaná), каю́к (ru) m (kajúk), кирды́к (ru) m (kirdýk), капу́т (ru) m (kapút), кры́шка (ru) f (krýška), пизде́ц (ru) m (pizdéc) (vulgar)
- Spanish: jodido (es), cagado (es), en el horno (slang informal), apañado (es)
- Turkish: ayvayı yemek (tr)
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Translations to be checked
Verb
screwed
- simple past and past participle of screw
- He screwed the boards together tightly.
- I got screwed at the swap meet yesterday.
- 1641, Richard Chambers (merchant), quoted in Hannis Taylor, The Origin and Growth of the English Constitution: An Historical Treatise, Part II: The After-Growth of the Constitution, H.O. Houghton & Company (1889), p. 274,
- […] merchants are in no part of the world so screwed as in England. In Turkey, they have more encouragement.