< 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica

LURCH, a word with several meanings, the etymological relationships of which are obscure. The chief uses which survive are (1) in the phrase to leave in the lurch, to abandon some one, to leave him in a position of great difficulty; (2) a stagger, sudden leaning over, originally a nautical expression of a sudden list made by a ship; (3) the name of a dog, the lurcher used by poachers, properly a cross between a sheepdog or collie and a greyhound. In (1) lurch is the name of a game, of which nothing is known (it is supposed to have resembled backgammon), and also of a state of the score in various games, in which the loser either scores nothing or is beaten by very heavy points. In this sense the term is practically obsolete. It was taken from Fr. lourche, connected with many German forms, now only dialectical such as Lortsch, Lurtsch, Lorz, Lurz, all for some kind of game, but also meaning left-hand, wrong, which the New English Dictionary thinks is the origin of the word, it being first used as a term in gambling. In (2) lurch occurs first in the form lee-lurches, sudden rolls a ship takes to leeward in a heavy sea, which may be a corruption of lee-latch, defined in Smyth's Sailor's Word Book as dropping to leeward of the course. In (3) lurch is probably another form of lurk, to lie in wait for, watch stealthily, hence to pilfer, steal.

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