Word
Of
The
Day
disheveled
disheveled \dih-SHEV-uld\
adjective
A disheveled person or thing is not neat or tidy.
// His wrinkled suit gave him a
disheveled appearance.
See the entry >
Examples:
“My mother is waking up. ... She dresses quickly. Her oblong, Scots-Irish face may be too idiosyncratic for the screen anyway, the hollow cheekbones and sharp eyes, the straw-blond hair worn in a low-slung and slightly
disheveled beehive.” — Matthew Specktor,
The Golden Hour: A Story of Family and Power in Hollywood, 2025
Did you know?
These days, the adjective
disheveled is used to describe almost anything or anyone marked by disorder or disarray. Rumpled clothes, for example, often contribute to a disheveled appearance, as in
Colson Whitehead’s novel
Crook Manifesto, when the comedian Roscoe Pope walks onstage “disheveled, in wrinkled green corduroy pants.” Apartments, desks, bedsheets, you name it—all can be disheveled when not at their neatest and tidiest.
Hair, however, is the most common noun to which
disheveled is applied (along with hairdo terms like
bun and
beard), a fact that makes etymological sense.
Disheveled comes from the Middle English adjective
discheveled, meaning “bareheaded” or “with disordered hair.” That word is a partial translation of the Anglo-French word
deschevelé, a combination of the prefix
des- (
“dis-“) and
chevoil, meaning “hair.”