banjax
English
    
    Alternative forms
    
- banjack
- bandjax
Etymology
    
Unknown, perhaps originally Dublin slang.[1] According to Green’s Dictionary of Slang, may be a euphemism for ballocks.[2]
Verb
    
banjax (third-person singular simple present banjaxes, present participle banjaxing, simple past and past participle banjaxed)
- (Britain, originally Ireland, slang) To ruin or destroy.
-  1922, Darrell Figgis, The House of Success, The Gael Co-operative Publishing Society, Ltd., page 146:- I hoofed his backside till he went down all of a heap. That banjaxed his little game. You should have heard his hullabulloo.
 
-  1928, Eimar O'Duffy, The Spacious Adventures of the Man in the Street, Macmillan, page 370:- Indeed, it seemed that the army was hopelessly banjaxed.
 
-  1970, Edna O'Brien, A Pagan Place, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, published 2001, page 91:- Emma had suggested that you hide, said your presence might banjax her position.
 
-  2006, Craig Ferguson, Between the Bridge and the River, Chronicle Books, page 252:- Fraser was looking at the flat, wet countryside and thinking about the French policeman who had banjaxed him with the truncheon.
 
- For quotations using this term, see Citations:banjax.
 
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Translations
    
Noun
    
banjax (plural banjaxes)
- (chiefly Ireland, informal) A mess or undesirable situation made as a result of incompetence.
-  1922, Seán O'Casey, Juno and the Paycock:- I'm tellin' you the scholar, Bentham, made a banjax o' th' Will.
 
 
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References
    
- Oxford English Dictionary, 2013.
- Jonathon Green (2023), “banjax”, in Green's Dictionary of Slang
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