Advertisement

quagmire (n.)

1570s, "bog, marsh," from obsolete quag "bog, marsh" + mire (n.). Early spellings include quamyre (1550s), quabmire (1590s), quadmire (c. 1600). Extended sense of "difficult situation, inescapable bad position" is recorded by 1766; but this seems to have been not in common use in much of 19c. (absent in "Century Dictionary," 1902), but revived in a narrower sense in reference to military invasions in American English, 1965, with reference to Vietnam (popularized in the book title "The Making of a Quagmire" by David Halberstam).

Others are reading

Advertisement
Definitions of quagmire from WordNet

quagmire (n.)
a soft wet area of low-lying land that sinks underfoot;
Synonyms: mire / quag / morass / slack
From wordnet.princeton.edu