Definition
Something that is excessively complicated, entangled, or disorderly (either physically or metaphorically).
In Context
- "rat's nest of a wiring harness"
- "To make this mid-17th-century rat's nest of love affairs and sexual confusions intelligible for late-20th-century audiences is a job in itself."
- "That has been held up by the need to negotiate the distribution rights for each country with the labels and artists—a rat's nest of contracts."
- "Faced with that rat's nest of legal and jurisdictional issues, the NLRB threw the Northwestern players' labor rights under the team bus."
- "Many CPU silicon designers in the 1990s complained bitterly about the rat's nest in the center of SPARC chips."
- "And cloud computing relies on millions of connections and services. In other words, it's a troubleshooting nightmare when the cloud goes bust. . . . In other words, the cloud will likely become more of a rat's nest."
- "2016 July 2, veryatlantic, "Saturday, July 2, 2016: Addendum," Tales From The Trailer Court™ (retrieved 2 March 2017):"
- "Think of libraries as the way the sub-idiots who like C code hide all the rat's-nest programming they don't want you to see."
Also Said As
- mare's nest
See Also
- hornets' nest
- rat king
- spaghetti code