a basket case

basket case

1. Someone who is viewed as emotionally unstable and unable to function in normal situations. Sarah was so nervous on her first day of high school that she burst into tears after walking into the wrong classroom. Her classmates looked at her like she was a complete basket case.
2. A country, business, or other entity that is facing economic strife. If the unemployment rate doesn't decrease soon, the country is going to become a financial basket case.
See also: basket, case
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

basket case

Fig. a person who is a nervous wreck. (Formerly referred to a person who is physically disabled in all four limbs because of paralysis or amputation.) After that all-day meeting, I was practically a basket case. My weeks of worry were so intense that I was a real basket case afterwards.
See also: basket, case
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.

basket case

A person or thing too impaired to function. For example, The stress of moving twice in one year left her a basket case, or The republics of the former Soviet Union are economic basket cases. Originating in World War I for a soldier who had lost all four limbs in combat and consequently had to be carried in a litter ("basket"), this term was then transferred to an emotionally or mentally unstable person and later to anything that failed to function. [Slang; second half of 1900s]
See also: basket, case
The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms by Christine Ammer.

a basket case

COMMON
1. If a country or organization is a basket case, its economy or finances are in a very bad state. The popular image about this region a few years ago was that it was a basket case. In the seventies, the Post Office was regarded as a basket case, doomed to decline by the competition from phone, fax and modem.
2. If a person is a basket case, they are crazy. Mary comes to work in tears every day — I tell you, she's turning into a basket case. Note: This expression was originally used to describe someone, especially a soldier, who had lost all four limbs. It may have come about because some of these people had to be carried around in baskets.
See also: basket, case
Collins COBUILD Idioms Dictionary, 3rd ed.

basket case

a person or thing regarded as useless or unable to cope. informal
The expression evolved from a US slang term for a soldier who had lost all four limbs in action, and was thus unable to move independently.
2004 Royal Academy Magazine The transformation of Liverpool from urban basket case to textbook case for design-led regeneration has been one of the most remarkable turnarounds in recent city history.
See also: basket, case
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary

a ˈbasket case

(informal)
1 a country or an organization whose economic situation is very bad: A few years ago, the country was an economic basket case, but now things are different.
2 a person who is slightly crazy and who has problems dealing with situations: ‘How did the interview go?’ ‘Terrible! I’m sure they thought I was a complete basket case.’
See also: basket, case
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary

basket case

n. a person who is a nervous wreck. (Formerly referred to a person who is totally physically disabled.) After that meeting, I was practically a basket case.
See also: basket, case
McGraw-Hill's Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions

basket case

An individual too impaired to function. This term dates from World War I, when it denoted a soldier who had lost both arms and legs and had to be carried off the field in a basket or litter. In civilian usage the term was applied to an emotionally unstable person who is unable to cope. Today it is used still more loosely to describe an attack of nerves, as in “The mother of the bride was a basket case.”
See also: basket, case
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer
See also:
  • basket case
  • pop (one's) cork
  • pop cork
  • pop one’s cork
  • damaged
  • go mad
  • talk like a nut
  • head the ball
  • steel (someone or oneself) against (someone or something)
  • headcase
References in periodicals archive
In the article, we quoted Marvin as saying he purchased his rare 1911 Heider Model A as "a basket case." We also captioned a photo of the Model A's drive chains with the comment, "Marvin removed the 15-foot chains and restored each link by hand." In both instances, Marvin was referring to his 1913 Heider Model B, which was indeed a basket case, and not the 1911 Model A.
How you prepare a disabled M109A6 Paladin for towing may determine whether or not you're a basket case by the time you get back to the motor pool.