predicament
[ pri-dik-uh-muh nt for 1, 3; pred-i-kuh-muh nt for 2 ]
/ prɪˈdɪk ə mənt for 1, 3; ˈprɛd ɪ kə mənt for 2 /
noun
an unpleasantly difficult, perplexing, or dangerous situation.
a class or category of logical or philosophical predication.
Archaic.
a particular state, condition, or situation.
Origin of predicament
SYNONYMS FOR predicament
1
Predicament,
dilemma,
plight,
quandary refer to unpleasant or puzzling situations.
Predicament and
plight stress more the unpleasant nature,
quandary and
dilemma the puzzling nature of the situation.
Predicament and
plight are sometimes interchangeable;
plight, however, though originally meaning peril or danger, is seldom used today except laughingly:
When his suit wasn't ready at the cleaners, he was in a terrible plight.
Predicament, though likewise capable of being used lightly, may also refer to a really crucial situation:
Stranded in a strange city without money, he was in a predicament.
Dilemma, in popular use, means a position of doubt or perplexity in which one is faced by two equally undesirable alternatives:
the dilemma of a hostess who must choose between offending her anti-drinking guests or disappointing those who expected cocktails.
Quandary is the state of mental perplexity of one faced with a difficult situation:
There seemed to be no way out of the quandary.
OTHER WORDS FROM predicament
pre·dic·a·men·tal [pri-dik-uh-men-tl, pred-i-kuh-] /prɪˌdɪk əˈmɛn tl, ˌprɛd ɪ kə-/, adjective pre·dic·a·men·tal·ly, adverbWords nearby predicament
Example sentences from the Web for predicament
British Dictionary definitions for predicament
predicament
/ (prɪˈdɪkəmənt) /
noun
a perplexing, embarrassing, or difficult situation
(ˈprɛdɪkəmənt) logic obsolete
one of Aristotle's ten categories of being
archaic
a specific condition, circumstance, state, position, etc
Word Origin for predicament
C14: from Late Latin
praedicāmentum what is predicated, from
praedicāre to announce, assert; see
predicate