🔳 🔳 🔳


Primary

⁀➴

''malinger'' ▫ᴱᴺ|Definition|1st|20260305143651-00-⌔

malinger - Wiktionary, the free dictionary

English

Verb

malinger (third-person singular simple present malingers, present participle malingering, simple past and past participle malingered)

  • (ambitransitive) To feign illness, injury, or incapacitation in order to avoid work, obligation, or perilous risk.
    • ✤ Hypernyms: (dated) goldbrick, shirk
    • It is not uncommon on exam days for several students to malinger rather than prepare themselves.
    • And the afternoon, the evening, sleeps so peacefully!/Smoothed by long fingers,/Asleep … tired … or it malingers,/Stretched on the floor, here beside you and me.1
    • It has been the impression of past investigators that persons who malinger psychosis have latent tendencies for the condition.2
  • (ambitransitive) To self-inflict real injury or infection (to inflict self-harm) in order to avoid work, obligation, or perilous risk.

Etymology

From French malingrer, from adjective malingre (“delicate, fragile”).

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA: /məˈlɪŋɡə/
  • (US) IPA: /məˈlɪŋɡɚ/
  • Audio (US): 🔊
  • Audio (Australian): 🔊
  • Rhymes: -ɪŋɡə(ɹ)

Printed 2026-06-28.

(echo:: @ )

Footnotes

  1. 1915 June, T[homas] S[tearns] Eliot, “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock”, in Prufrock and Other Observations, London: The Egoist […], published 1917, →OCLC, page 13:

  2. 1984, The Psychiatric Quarterly, volume 56:

Link to original

Secondary

• • •