Advertisement

effete (adj.)

1620s, "functionless as a result of age or exhaustion," from Latin effetus (usually in fem. effeta) "exhausted, unproductive, worn out (with bearing offspring), past bearing," literally "that has given birth," from a lost verb, *efferi, from assimilated form of ex "out" (see ex-) + fetus "childbearing, offspring" (see fetus). Figurative use is earliest in English; literal use is rare. Sense of "intellectually or morally exhausted" (1790) led to that of "decadent, effeminate" (by 1850s).

Others are reading

Advertisement
Definitions of effete from WordNet

effete (adj.)
affected, overrefined, and effeminate;
the young man spoke in effete, accented English
effete (adj.)
deprived of vigor and the ability to be effective;
fundamentalism has flowered because it has concluded that liberalism is effete, ineffectual and impoverished
From wordnet.princeton.edu