mayhem
[ mey-hem, mey-uh m ]
/ ˈmeɪ hɛm, ˈmeɪ əm /
noun
Law.
the crime of willfully inflicting a bodily injury on another so as to make the victim less capable of self-defense or, under modern statutes, so as to cripple or mutilate the victim.
random or deliberate violence or damage.
a state of rowdy disorder: Antagonisms between the various factions at the meeting finally boiled over, and mayhem ensued.
Origin of mayhem
1350–1400; Middle English
maheym, maim < Anglo-French
mahe(i)m, mahaim < Germanic; akin to Middle High German
meidem gelding, Old Norse
meitha to injure. See
maim
Words nearby mayhem
Example sentences from the Web for mayhem
British Dictionary definitions for mayhem
mayhem
maihem
/ (ˈmeɪhɛm) /
noun
law
the wilful and unlawful infliction of injury upon a person, esp (formerly) the injuring or removing of a limb rendering him less capable of defending himself against attack
any violent destruction or confusion
Word Origin for mayhem
C15: from Anglo-French
mahem injury, from Germanic; related to Icelandic
meitha to hurt. See
maim