English

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Pronunciation

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Verb

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arsed

  1. simple past and past participle of arse.

Adjective

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arsed (comparative more arsed, superlative most arsed)

  1. (Commonwealth, vulgar, slang, chiefly in the negative) Bothered; willing to make an effort.
    Synonyms: fucked, (minced oath) asked, (Australia) sacked
    I can’t be arsed to get out of bed today.
    We asked John if he wanted to come down the pub with us, but he couldn’t be arsed.
    • 2008, Lynn Broadbent, Infinite Ideas Staff, Be Arsed: 365 Brilliant Ideas for Getting Off Your Backside and Living Life to the Full[1]:
    • 2008, Guy Cullen, Loose Ends, page 2:
      You can keep all the macho bollocks that goes with the job. I can’t be arsed who thinks what of me to be perfectly honest and I have no time for those that are.
    • 2011, Ray Banks, Beast of Burden, page 133:
      [] but here’s the way you’re supposed to run it: make out like it’ll be a long, drawn out process, that you can’t be arsed and that they shouldn’t be arsed because it’ll probably end up doing fuck all except getting a copper pissed off at them.
  2. (vulgar, in combinations) Having a particular kind of arse
    a big-arsed man

Usage notes

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The term arsed, when used to mean bothered is not used attributively: a person who is bothered is not an arsed person.

Derived terms

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Anagrams

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