fray1

[frey] /freɪ/
noun
1.
a fight, battle, or skirmish.
2.
a competition or contest, especially in sports.
3.
a noisy quarrel or brawl.
4.
Archaic. fright.
verb (used with object)
5.
Archaic. to frighten.
verb (used without object)
6.
Archaic. to fight or brawl.
Origin
1250-1300; Middle English frai; aphetic variant of affray
Can be confused
frays, phrase.
Word story
“I joined the fray, and proceeded to fray my clothes.” What we have here are two completely different words that happen to be spelled (and pronounced) the same way. This is the story of the first fray, a word for a fight, a competition, or a noisy brawl.
This fray was borrowed into English from an Anglo-French word with the various meanings “to disturb,” “to attack,” and also “to frighten.” The past participle of this same word (affrayed, meaning “alarmed”) became, in English, afraid.
While nowadays frays are things that people willingly “enter” or “join” or even “throw themselves into,” early in its history the fear aspect dominated. And so, in the 1300s, one could speak of frayes and dredes (fears and dreads) and in the 1500s, one might find a fray-boggard (fear-goblin) in the garden, a frightening specter better known to us as a scarecrow.
Related Quotations
“Shall we play the coward, then, and leave the hard knocks for our daughters, or shall we throw ourselves into the fray, bare our own shoulders to the blows, and thus bequeath to them a politically liberated womanhood?“
—Carrie Chapman Catt, The Crisis (delivered September 7, 1916)
“The Portuguese [referees] offered no brotherly love to Pelé by fouling him seven times, eventually forcing his withdrawal from the fray.“
—Tony Mason, Passion of the people?: Football in South America (1995)
“Pedestrians attempted to squeeze by and avoid being pulled into the loud fray between the two draymen.“
—Georgina Flemming, The Light to My Darkness (1992)

fray2

[frey] /freɪ/
verb (used with object)
1.
to wear (cloth, rope, etc.) to loose, raveled threads or fibers at the edge or end; cause to ravel out:
Our old washing machine frayed all of our towels.
2.
to wear by rubbing (sometimes followed by through).
3.
to cause strain on (something); upset; discompose:
All that arguing is fraying my nerves.
4.
to rub.
verb (used without object)
5.
to wear into loose, raveled threads or fibers, as cloth; ravel out:
My sweater frayed at the elbows.
6.
to become strained or stressed:
Jealousy could be a sign that your relationship is fraying.
7.
to rub against something:
tall grass fraying against my knees.
noun
8.
a raveled or worn part, as in cloth:
frays at the toes of well-worn sneakers.
Origin
1375-1425; late Middle English fraien < Old French frayer, freiier to rub < Latin fricāre. See friction
Related forms
frayed, adjective
Word story
This is the story of the second fray, a word that means to cause deterioriation or wear on something, usually material, by rubbing it. Metaphorically, this can apply to less tangible things, such as our nerves or our tempers.
This fray is closely related to the word friction, as both have as a common ancestor the Latin fricāre, meaning “to rub.” It makes sense—given enough friction, things will begin to fray. But language isn’t always so neat. One early sense of fray that existed in the 1400s, but which has since fallen out of use, meant “to bruise” (as in, with our strokes we shall fray him). In a translation of Ovid’s Metamorphoses dating from the 1500s, this very same sense in a different context is used to mean “deflower” (deprive of virginity). Can we connect the dots from rub to bruise to deflower? Therein lies the rub.
Related Quotations
“[O]nce more he set to work on the laborious task of fraying through his ropes.“
—John Russell Fearn and Philip Harbottle, Liquid Death and Other Stories (2002)
“The heat and hunger frayed men's tempers.“
—Colin Falconer, When We Were Gods: A Novel of Cleopatra (2000)
“Tempers fray and arguments flare as motorists exchange expletives over the last parking space.“
—Andrew Holmes and Dan Wilson, Pains in Public: 50 People Most Likely to Drive You Completely Nuts! (2004)
Examples from the web for fray
  • At the height of the fray, however, the wires got crossed somewhere.
  • The researchers note that the white matter appears to fray more over time in the forebrain than in the brain's rear.
  • But, once the geneticists entered the fray, these results were forgotten or ignored.
  • But by the early nineties, the cognitive map began to fray.
  • Their tumultuous relationship, however, soon began to fray.
  • After all, it would be perfectly acceptable to simply advocate for good science and stay out of this particular fray.
  • To have awareness of social injustice is a quite reasonable requirement for someone preparing to wade into the fray.
  • Diving into the fray when things have already gotten ugly isn't always easy.
  • Texture seems to matter: ask anyone who's entered the crunchy versus chewy fray.
  • He seems to have wandered into the fray, perhaps on his way home from school.
British Dictionary definitions for fray

fray1

/freɪ/
noun
1.
a noisy quarrel
2.
a fight or brawl
3.
an archaic word for fright
verb (archaic)
4.
(transitive) to frighten
Word Origin
C14: short for affray

fray2

/freɪ/
verb
1.
to wear or cause to wear away into tatters or loose threads, esp at an edge or end
2.
to make or become strained or irritated
3.
to rub or chafe (another object) or (of two objects) to rub against one another
noun
4.
a frayed place, as in cloth
Word Origin
C14: from French frayer to rub, from Latin fricāre; see friction, friable
Word Origin and History for fray
n.

mid-14c., "feeling of alarm," shortening of affray (q.v.; see also afraid). Meaning "a brawl, a fight" is from early 15c. (but late 14c. in Anglo-Latin). Fraymaker "fighter, brawler" is an excellent word from a 1530s statute.

v.

"wear out by rubbing," c.1400, from Middle French frayer "to rub against," from Old French froiier "rub, scrape," from Latin fricare "to rub, rub down" (see friction). Related: Frayed; fraying.

Idioms and Phrases with fray