laid up
English
editAdjective
editlaid up (not comparable)
- Unable to move about normally due to illness or injury, especially when confined to bed.
- 1902, John Buchan, The Outgoing of the Tide:
- For days Ailie had an absent eye and a sad face, and it so fell out that in all that time young Heriotside, who had scarce missed a day, was laid up with a broken arm and never came near her.
- 2000, Arthur Michael Saltzman, This Mad "instead": Governing Metaphors in Contemporary American Fiction, →ISBN, page 12:
- Flesh occasionally feels stalemated, more laid up than at home.
- 2003 July 7, Walter Isaacson, “How They Chose These Words”, in Time:
- He was still laid up in bed with boils and gout when the committee first met.
- Stored at a dock or other place of safety.
- The ship was laid up until repairs could commence.
Verb
edit- simple past and past participle of lay up