rack and ruin, go to



rack and ruin, go to

Also, go to wrack and ruin. Become decayed, decline or fall apart, as in After the founder's death the business went to rack and ruin. These expressions are emphatic redundancies, since rack and wrack (which are actually variants of the same word) mean "destruction" or "ruin." [Mid-1500s]
See also: and, rack

Common Names:

NameGenderPronouncedUsage
Shantelleshahn-TEL, shan-TELEnglish (Rare)
Hulda (1)HUWL-dah (German)Icelandic, Swedish, Norwegian, Danish, German, Norse Mythology
Gaspare-Italian
Firouzeh-Persian
ThÉOphilete-o-FEELFrench
Heru-Egyptian Mythology