cripple
verb /ˈkrɪpl/
  /ˈkrɪpl/
 Verb Forms
| present simple I / you / we / they cripple |    /ˈkrɪpl/   /ˈkrɪpl/  | 
| he / she / it cripples |    /ˈkrɪplz/   /ˈkrɪplz/  | 
| past simple crippled |    /ˈkrɪpld/   /ˈkrɪpld/  | 
| past participle crippled |    /ˈkrɪpld/   /ˈkrɪpld/  | 
| -ing form crippling |    /ˈkrɪplɪŋ/   /ˈkrɪplɪŋ/  | 
- [usually passive] to damage somebody’s body so that they are no longer able to walk or move normally synonym disable
- be crippled (by something) He was crippled by polio as a child.
 - be crippled with something She's eighty and crippled with arthritis.
 
Extra ExamplesTopics Illnessc2- As a child she contracted polio and was crippled for life.
 - The disease left him crippled.
 
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb- for life
 - permanently
 - emotionally
 - …
 
- be crippled with
 - leave somebody crippled
 
 - [usually passive] to seriously damage or harm somebody/something
- be crippled (by something) The industry has been financially crippled by these policies.
 - Sugar producers have been crippled by plummeting prices.
 - The pilot tried to land his crippled plane.
 
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb- severely
 - financially
 
 
Word OriginOld English: from two words, crypel and crēopel, both of Germanic origin and related to creep.