welter

1 of 3

verb

wel·​ter ˈwel-tər How to pronounce welter (audio)
weltered; weltering ˈwel-t(ə-)riŋ How to pronounce welter (audio) ; welters

intransitive verb

1
a
: writhe, toss
also : wallow
b
: to rise and fall or toss about in or with waves
2
: to become deeply sunk, soaked, or involved
3
: to be in turmoil

welter

2 of 3

noun (1)

1
: a state of wild disorder : turmoil
2
: a chaotic mass or jumble
a bewildering welter of data

welter

3 of 3

noun (2)

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The History of Welter

Welter can be used both as a noun (meaning "turmoil" or "chaos") and a verb. The verb is the older of the two; it has been part of English since at least the 1300s, while the earliest uses of the noun date from the late 1590s. Both noun and verb have roots related to Dutch and Germanic terms meaning "to roll," and both have found a place in historical English literature. The verb helps demonstrate extreme despair in the early Arthurian legend Morte Arthure ("He welterys, he wristeles, he wrynges hys handes!"), and in 1837 Thomas Carlyle used the noun in The French Revolution ("I leave the whole business in a frightful welter: … not one of them understands anything of government").

Examples of welter in a Sentence

Noun (1) there was a welter of pushing and shoving as people rushed to grab the best seats for the outdoor concert a welter of junk in the closet, most of which needed to be thrown out the claim that a troop withdrawal would plunge the country into a welter of anarchy and endless civil war
Recent Examples on the Web
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Noun
His approach has been to fund a welter of grassroots groups staffed by people from some of the city’s most heavily affected neighborhoods, while also working to reduce complaints about the police force, which has been under federal oversight throughout his time in office. Kelefa Sanneh, The New Yorker, 30 Sep. 2024 The welter of theories has become confusing, even to experts. Chris Gallagher, USA TODAY, 26 Sep. 2024 What has emerged in the decades since is a welter of backlogs, visa shortages, piecemeal enforcement measures, and every manner of bureaucratic complexity. Jonathan Blitzer, The New Yorker, 30 June 2024 Obviously, the realities of Peak TV, and the welter of streaming services currently competing for eyeballs, create financial pressure that did not exist in those halcyon days. Mary McNamara, Los Angeles Times, 24 June 2024 See all Example Sentences for welter 

Word History

Etymology

Verb

Middle English welteren, weltryn "to turn over, tumble, writhe, take unrestrained pleasure (in)," frequentative derivative of welten "to topple, overturn, fall over," by-form (perhaps from a Germanic weak verb *waltjan-) of walten "to turn over, upend, be overturned, cast, throw, surge," going back to Old English -wæltan (in gewæltan "to roll"), going back to a Germanic verbal base *walt-, *welt- "roll," found in a variety of attested formations (as Old English awyltan "to roll away," unwealt "steady," Middle High German walzen "to roll over," Old Icelandic velta [strong verb, intransitive] "to roll, roll over," velta [transitive] "to set rolling," Gothic waltjan "to surge against [of waves]," uswaltjan "to overturn"), going back to Indo-European *u̯el-d-, extended form of *u̯el(H)- "roll," whence, with various vowel grades and stem formations, Old Irish fillid "(s/he) bends, turns back" (< *u̯el-n-), Old Church Slavic valiti sę "to roll (intransitive)," Lithuanian veliù, vélti "to full (cloth), roll," Greek eiléō, eileîn "wind, turn round, roll up" (< *u̯el-né-), íllō, íllein in same sense (< *u̯i-u̯l-ō), Armenian glem "to roll"

Note: The Middle English verb is paralleled by Middle Dutch welteren and Middle Low German weltern, which Oxford English Dictionary, first edition, regards as the source of the English word. — Lexikon der indogermanischen Verben, 2. Auflage (Wiesbaden, 2001), enters two etyma, *u̯el- "to turn, roll" (drehen, rollen) and *u̯elH- "to roll, seethe" (wälzen, wallen), presumably on the grounds that Lithuanian vélti, with acute intonation, would suggest a laryngeal, while there is no suggestion of a laryngeal in Greek eiléō, etc. For present purposes, etyma with the meaning "seethe, bubble" are treated separately, under well entry 2. Also treated under *u̯el- in the Lexikon are verbs showing an extension with a semi-vowel, *u̯el-u̯-, which are covered here at wallow entry 1. Additionally, there are stems ending in a velar, *u̯el-k-/*u̯el-gh- "to roll"; these are covered here at walk entry 1. All of these elements, as well as many nominal formations, are treated as extensions of a single root *u̯el- in J. Pokorny, Indogermanisches etymologisches Wörterbuch.

Noun (1)

derivative of welter entry 1

Noun (2)

by shortening

First Known Use

Verb

14th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1a

Noun (1)

1596, in the meaning defined at sense 1

Noun (2)

1900, in the meaning defined above

Time Traveler
The first known use of welter was in the 14th century

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Dictionary Entries Near welter

Cite this Entry

“Welter.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/welter. Accessed 8 Nov. 2024.

Kids Definition

welter

1 of 2 verb
wel·​ter ˈwel-tər How to pronounce welter (audio)
weltered; weltering -t(ə-)riŋ How to pronounce welter (audio)
1
: to twist or roll one's body about
2
: to rise and fall or toss about in or with waves
3
: to become deeply sunk or bogged down
weltered in misery

welter

2 of 2 noun
1
: a state of wild confusion
2
: a confused jumble
a welter of information

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