on the fritz
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Unknown. Attested from 1902, originally meaning “in a bad way” or “in bad condition”, malfunctioning of an appliance. Perhaps from German name. Fritz, or onomatopoeic (here, imitating the sound of electric sparks jumping).[1]
Pronunciation
[edit]- Rhymes: -ɪts
Prepositional phrase
[edit]- (of electrical or mechanical appliances, idiomatic, Northern US) Out of order; malfunctioning; broken.
- Synonyms: fritzed, (Australian) bung, (UK, Australia) on the blink, (offensive) spaz
- I'd record it, but my tape deck is on the fritz again.
- My washing machine has gone on the fritz, and I have a load of muddy clothes to clean.
- 2000 November 5, Bob Morris, “Don't Spill It on Me”, in The New York Times[1], →ISSN:
- Actually, no one had noticed, from what I could tell, though I was alarmed to hear about it. Why was our pilot telling us about questionable brakes and a computer on the fritz when we still had a landing to worry about five hours ahead?
- 2004, Lisa Marie Rice, Woman On the Run, page 32:
- No ′40s movie heroine worth the name would have a house that let in gusts of gelid air, had a heating system that went on the fritz constantly and leaked.
- 2006, Nero Blanc, Death on the Diagonal, page 191:
- “Or your cell-phone reception went on the fritz. We know how often that happens.”
- 2010, Ralph Bowersox, Ralph's True Stories: Entertaining Chronicles of Life in Clarion County, Pennsylvania, Late 1920s through the Present Day, page 185:
- Some time ago, a tenant called me and said her refrigerator was on the fritz. I had a spare, so I took it down to her and exchanged it for her old one.
Derived terms
[edit]- fritz up (obsolete, 1910s)
Translations
[edit]out of order, malfunctioning
References
[edit]- ^ Michael Quinion (1996–2024) “On the fritz”, in World Wide Words.