1 garble | Definition of garble

garble

verb
gar·​ble | \ ˈgĂ€r-bəl How to pronounce garble (audio) \
garbled; garbling\ ˈgĂ€r-​b(ə-​)liƋ How to pronounce garbling (audio) \

Definition of garble

 (Entry 1 of 2)

transitive verb

1 archaic : cull sense 1
2 : to sift impurities from
3a : to so alter or distort as to create a wrong impression or change the meaning garble a story
b : to introduce textual error into (a message) by inaccurate encipherment, transmission, or decipherment

garble

noun

Definition of garble (Entry 2 of 2)

1 : the impurities removed from spices in sifting
2 : an act or an instance of garbling

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Other Words from garble

Verb

garbler \ ˈgĂ€r-​b(ə-​)lər How to pronounce garbler (audio) \ noun

The Winding History of Garble

Verb

Garble developed from Late Latin cribellare, a verb meaning "to sift." Arabic speakers borrowed "cribellare" as "gharbala," and the Arabic word passed into Old Italian as garbellare; both of these words also meant "to sift." When the word first entered Middle English as "garbelen," its meaning stayed close to the original; it meant "to sort out the best." But that sort of sifting can cause a distortion, and in early Modern English "garble" came to mean "to distort the meaning or sound of."

Examples of garble in a Sentence

Verb

the candidate complained that his views had been deliberately garbled by his opponent garbled spices are less likely to contaminate a recipe

Recent Examples on the Web: Verb

Michael Ramsaur’s lighting and Andrew Heller’s sound are both fine, though there are places in the cavernous (941 seats) Smithwick Theatre where sound is garbled. Joanne Engelhardt, The Mercury News, "Theater review: ‘Cinderella’ gets a make-over worth seeing," 25 July 2019 The accents were not a problem when the actors spoke slowly, but when Rose was excited or angry, her rapid pace garbled some of her lines. Elizabeth Marie Himchak, Pomerado News, "REVIEW: ‘Matilda the Musical’ has surprise twists on movie’s plot," 24 July 2019 When there’s noise in the whale’s water, like a boat sound, some of the whale songs get garbled. Brian Resnick, Vox, "What humpback whales can teach us about alien languages," 6 Dec. 2018 Siri often doesn't hear me correctly, so my texts get garbled. Cyrus Farivar, Ars Technica, "“Computer, lights:” How Ars staffers actually use voice-interactive bots," 3 Sep. 2018 Slater did not speak English well, his heavy German accent frequently garbling words and making him misunderstood. Sarah Weinman, The New Republic, "Arthur Conan Doyle, True Detective," 14 June 2018 And, for a long, innocent moment, everything about this arrangement will seem surreal to the black child, distorted, like a message that has somehow been garbled in the delivery. Danielle Jackson, Longreads, "Zadie Smith on the Work and Influences of Deana Lawson," 11 May 2018 Telephone’ in which original meaning becomes hopelessly garbled with every successive re-tweet. Sarah Jones, New Republic, "There’s No Such Thing as Twitter Feminism," 7 Feb. 2018 And, for a long, innocent moment, everything about this arrangement will seem surreal to the black child, distorted, like a message that has somehow been garbled in the delivery. Rachel Aviv, The New Yorker, "Deana Lawson’s Kingdom of Restored Glory," 8 Jan. 2018

Recent Examples on the Web: Noun

The audio reflects about 30 minutes of radio transmissions edited for brevity and elimination of gaps and garbles. D. Kwas, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, "Semitrailer driver cited in crash that shut down I-43 near Mitchell Interchange," 27 Aug. 2019 At every turn, Guyatt either garbles or corrupts my arguments. Nicholas Guyatt, The New York Review of Books, "‘No Property in Man’: An Exchange," 6 June 2019 But the video — and subsequent performances, including a cringey SNL appearance — contains visual and lyrical content that is not a focused homage to Japan but rather a garble of exociticizing Asian signifiers. Andrew Chow, refinery29.com, "Let's Be Real: Asian And Black Artists Aren't "Celebrating" Each Other Through Hip-Hop," 22 May 2018 There are bouts of puppy love (and more intense crushes), plenty of witty garbles from Sunny, and some Broadway-worthy performances from Harris (the end of episode three might be the grandest of them all). Michaela Bechler, Vogue, "A Series of Unfortunate Events," 29 Mar. 2018 Indeed, Messina had given birth to a tool that would infiltrate our vernacular, aggregate conversations and, yes, fill screens with unnecessary, meaningless garble. Matt Stevens, The Seattle Times, "As the hashtag celebrates its 10th birthday, are we #blessed?," 27 Aug. 2017 Indeed, Messina had given birth to a tool that would infiltrate our vernacular, aggregate conversations and, yes, fill screens with unnecessary, meaningless garble. Matt Stevens, The Seattle Times, "As the hashtag celebrates its 10th birthday, are we #blessed?," 27 Aug. 2017 Indeed, Messina had given birth to a tool that would infiltrate our vernacular, aggregate conversations and, yes, fill screens with unnecessary, meaningless garble. The New York Times, NOLA.com, "As the hashtag marks its 10th birthday, are we #blessed?," 24 Aug. 2017 Tinkerbell is a man in a white tutu, who speaks in a garble impossible to understand. Susan Dunne, courant.com, "National Theatre Live's 'Peter Pan' In Area Theaters," 5 June 2017

These example sentences are selected automatically from various online news sources to reflect current usage of the word 'garble.' Views expressed in the examples do not represent the opinion of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.

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First Known Use of garble

Verb

15th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1

Noun

1502, in the meaning defined at sense 1

History and Etymology for garble

Verb

Middle English garbelen "to remove impurites or refuse from (spices)," borrowed from Anglo-French garbeler, probably borrowed—directly or from Italian *garbellare (attested in Medieval Latin of Verona as garbellāre in 1319)—from Arabic gharbala "to sift, screen," derivative of ghirbāl "sieve," borrowed from Late Latin crībellum, diminutive of Latin crībrum "sieve" — more at riddle entry 3

Note: Presumably a word passed from Arabic to Mediterranean Europe through trade in Eastern spices. The earliest evidence of the Romance/Latin etymon is in a statute of the city of Marseille (recording both garbellare and garbellum "sieve, riddle") from 1269 (though there is apparently no corresponding word in Old Occitan). The French form garbalé (past participle of the verb) is attested in a document from Bruges in Flanders dated to 1304. Joan Coromines (Diccionario crítico etimológico castellano e hispånico) believes the word was first adopted from Arabic in Catalonia, partly on the basis of the half-Catalan phrase grana assaonada "ripened grains [?]" used in the above-mentioned Marseille statute.

Noun

derivative of garble entry 1; in sense 1 perhaps in part borrowed from Italian garbello, noun derivative of garbellare

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More Definitions for garble

garble

verb

English Language Learners Definition of garble

: to cause (a word, name, message, etc.) to be unclear or confusing

garble

verb