Indisposed

来自Big Physics

google

ref

late Middle English: from in-1 ‘not’ + disposed, or past participle of indispose ‘make unwell or unwilling’.


Ety img indisposed.png

wiktionary

ref

in- +‎  disposed


etymonline

ref

indisposed (adj.)

c. 1400, "unprepared;" early 15c., "not in order," from in- (1) "not" + disposed; or else from Late Latin indispositus "without order, confused." From mid-15c. in English as "diseased;" modern sense of "not very well, slightly ill" is from 1590s. A verb indispose is attested from 1650s but perhaps is a back-formation of this, rather than its source, or from French indisposer.