Shabby

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google

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mid 17th century: from dialect shab ‘scab’ (from a Germanic base meaning ‘itch’) + -y1.


Ety img shabby.png

wiktionary

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From shab(“scab”) +‎ -y, or directly from an alteration of scabby. Cognate with Scots shabby(“in poor health, ill”), Dutch schabbig(“poor, needy, shabby”), Middle Low German schabbich(“miserable”), German schäbig(“shabby”), Swedish skabbig(“scabby”), Swedish sjabbig(“shabby, mangy, scruffy”).


etymonline

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shabby (adj.)

1660s, of persons, "poorly dressed," with -y (2) + shab "a low fellow" (1630s), literally "scab" (now only dialectal in the literal sense, in reference to a disease of sheep), from Old English sceabb (the native form of the Scandinavian word that yielded Modern English scab; also see sh-). Similar formation in Middle Dutch schabbich, German schäbig "shabby."

Of clothes, furniture, etc., "of mean appearance, no longer new or fresh" from 1680s; meaning "inferior in quality" is from 1805. Figurative sense "contemptibly mean" is from 1670s. Related: Shabbily; shabbiness. Shabby-genteel "run-down but trying to keep up appearances, retaining in present shabbiness traces of former gentility," first recorded 1754. Related: Shabaroon "disreputable person," c. 1700.