loath
Meanings
Adjective Satellite
- unwillingness to do something contrary to your custom
- "loath to admit a mistake"
- (usually followed by `to') strongly opposed
- "loath to go on such short notice"
Adj
- Averse, disinclined; reluctant, unwilling. Always followed by a verbal phrase.
- Angry, hostile.
- Loathsome, unpleasant.
Verb
- Obsolete spelling of loathe.
Origin / Etymology
From Middle English lōth (“loath; averse, hateful”), from Old English lāð, lāþ (“evil; loathsome”), or Old Norse leið, leiðr (“uncomfortable; tired”) from Proto-Germanic *laiþaz (“loath; hostile; sad, sorry”), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *h₂leyt- (“to do something abhorrent or hateful”).
The word is cognate with Danish led (“disgusting, loathsome; nasty”), Dutch leed (“sad; (Belgium) angry”), French laid (“ugly; morally corrupt”), Catalan lleig (“ugly”), Icelandic leiður (“annoyed, vexed; sad; (archaic or poetic) annoying, wearisome”), Italian laido (“filthy, foul; obscene”), Old Frisian leed, Old High German leid (Middle High German leit, modern German leid (“uncomfortable”), Leid (“grief, sorrow, woe; affliction, suffering; harm, injury; wrong”)), Old Saxon lêð, lēth (“evil person or thing”), Swedish led (“bored; tired; (archaic) disgusting, loathsome; evil”).
Synonyms
antipathetic, antipathetical, averse, disinclined, indisposed, loth, reluctant, unwilling
Antonyms
antonym(s) of
Scrabble Score: 8
loath is a valid Scrabble (US) TWL wordloath is a valid Scrabble Word in Merriam-Webster MW Dictionary
loath is a valid Scrabble Word in International Collins CSW Dictionary