Pronunciation: blun-der-gur-ding
The act of unintentionally reinforcing or supporting something in a way that actually weakens or undermines it. Often used to describe failed arguments, misguided fixes, or well-intentioned efforts that backfire spectacularly.
The act of unintentionally reinforcing or supporting something in a way that actually weakens or undermines it. Often used to describe failed arguments, misguided fixes, or well-intentioned efforts that backfire spectacularly.
* "I tried to fix my bike, but I ended up blundergirding it, and now the chain falls off every five seconds."
* "The politician attempted to defend their policy, but their speech was so full of contradictions that they only blundergirded their own position."
* "Dave said he was helping with the group project, but his ‘contributions’ were pure blundergirding—now we have twice as much work to fix his mistakes."
* "The politician attempted to defend their policy, but their speech was so full of contradictions that they only blundergirded their own position."
* "Dave said he was helping with the group project, but his ‘contributions’ were pure blundergirding—now we have twice as much work to fix his mistakes."
by lexically_challenged February 27, 2025
