Learn English – What does ‘lymphatic aid’ mean

phrase-meaning

In The Invisible Man,

"…Millie, her lymphatic aid, had been brisked up a bit by a few deftly chosen expressions of contempt…"

Learner's dictionary defines lymphatic as an adjective of lymph which is itself only defined as a medical term only.

What does the lymphatic aid mean?

Best Answer

As @orekelens states in the comments, and confirmed also by Free Dictionary, Lymphatic is an archaic word for

Lacking energy or vitality; sluggish.

The origin of the word comes from

1640s, from Modern Latin lymphaticus "pertaining to the lymph," from Latin lympha (see lymph). The English word also sometimes is used in what was the primary sense of lymphaticus in classical Latin, "mad, frenzied." OED reports this meaning "difficult to account for," but perhaps due to association of lympha with nymphe; compare Greek nymphian "to be frenzy-stricken." Also sometimes in reference to the appearance or temperament of one thought to suffer from excess of lymph, "dull, sluggish, slow in thought or action, with flabby muscles and pale skin" (1834).

Schmoop talks about the passage quoted from The Invisible Man by saying

Here, Mrs. Hall wants Millie to speed up her work. How does she do this?: "by a few deftly chosen expressions of contempt."

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